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NASA Unveils Artemis III Astronaut Crew to Test Critical Spaceflight Tech for Future Moon Landing

HOUSTON — Fresh off the historic success of the Artemis II ten-day lunar flyby in April, NASA has officially announced the four astronauts selected for the highly anticipated Artemis III mission. Speaking from the Johnson Space Center in Houston, agency officials revealed that Randy Bresnik, Andre Douglas, Frank Rubio, and Luca Parmitano will form the core crew tasked with testing critical docking and operational technologies needed to return humans to the lunar surface.

Unlike future surface missions, Artemis III will not land on the moon. Instead, the crew will launch into low Earth orbit to conduct comprehensive practice maneuvers, executing complex docking operations that are essential for long-duration spaceflight. The high-stakes mission is designed to validate human landing systems in real space environments before NASA attempts to place boots on the ground during subsequent missions later this decade.

The announcement comes during an intense private-sector race to build the hardware required for a successful landing. NASA is relying heavily on commercial partnerships with Elon Musk's SpaceX and Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin to develop the competing human landing systems. However, neither automated design has completed a flawless uncrewed test flight. SpaceX recently logged a successful test launch of its massive Starship platform, though technical engine anomalies prevented a perfect mission execution. Meanwhile, Blue Origin suffered a high-profile setback just two weeks ago when a booster meant to carry its lunar lander into space exploded in a massive fireball during a routine ground test. Despite the pad explosion, Blue Origin leadership maintained that the company has a solid path forward to remain on track for a launch later this year.

The development timelines are tight, as NASA intends to launch the Artemis III flight next year. NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman emphasized the agency's resolve to analyze recent hardware failures, fix mechanical issues, and continue moving forward aggressively. If the forthcoming orbital test proves successful, NASA remains committed to an official human landing mission in 2028, which would mark the first time humans have stepped onto the moon in over fifty years. The long-term vision includes establishing a permanent, sustainable lunar base powered by solar and nuclear energy, allowing future explorers to harvest water ice trapped inside deep craters at the lunar south pole.

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By: NBC Palm Springs

June 9, 2026

NASA Artemis III crew reveal 2026Randy BresnikAndre DouglasFrank RubioLuca ParmitanoJared Isaacman NASA AdministratorBlue Origin rocket explosionSpaceX Starship lunar landerTom Costello NBC News
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NASA Unveils Artemis III Astronaut Crew to Test Critical Spaceflight Tech for Future Moon Landing