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SHOOT FOR THE MOON...& THEN MARS

Daily Record

|

January 15, 2026

WARNING lights flashed: a life-threatening emergency.

- BY PETER SHERIDAN in Los Angeles

SHOOT FOR THE MOON...& THEN MARS

Recovered Apollo 11 module Red, left, crew Fred W. Haise Jr, James A. Lovell Jr and John L. Swigert Jr with President Nixon Apollo 11 crew Gus Grissom, Edward Higgins White and Roger B. Chaffee Apollo 17's Commander Gene Cernan on Moon, 1972 Doomed Challenger lifts off in 1986

Air leaked from the crew's module and the spaceship’ life-support system was failing.Calmly and methodically, the four astronauts addressed the crisis.

It was the Artemis II crew's first time together in their command module, and Nasa’s Mission Control threw life-or-death challenges at them in training at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida last July.

Towering over launch pad 39B, the Artemis II spaceship today sits ready to blast off as early as next month on the first crewed mission to the Moon since Apollo 17 in 1972.

Soaring 322ft above the pad, weighing 2585 metric tonnes and crammed with more than 45 miles of cables and wiring, it will be the largest, heaviest and most powerful rocket ever to leave Earth's orbit.

Though Artemis II will not land on the lunar surface - Nasa aims to put boots on the ground by 2030, though China is vying to get there first - it will fly 6400 miles behind the dark side of the Moon: the furthest humans have travelled into deep space.

Yet the Moon is only a stepping stone, a small detour before making the giant leap for mankind into interplanetary exploration with a mission to Mars.

President Donald Trump issued an Executive Order last month calling for a return to the Moon “to assert American leadership in space, lay the foundations for lunar economic development, prepare for the journey to Mars and inspire the next generation of explorers”.

Stephen Hawking in a 2008 Nasa lecture urged crewed missions to Mars, saying: “It will change the future of the human race and maybe determine whether we have any future at all.”

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