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Blue Origin | Blue Origin-Led HLS National Team's Mission to the Moon @blueorigin | Uploaded August 2020 | Updated October 2024, 1 day ago.
The National Team HLS design leverages significant prior work, flight heritage, and a modular solution. Modular solutions help to enable faster progress due to the independent development and testing of each element, which permits ongoing improvements and evolution without impacting the full system.  This also provides flexibility in the use of different launch vehicles and different concepts of operations.  

The Descent Element is based on Blue Origin’s Blue Moon cargo lander and BE-7 LOX/hydrogen engine, both in development for more than three years. The Ascent Element incorporates avionics, software, life support hardware, crew interfaces, and mission operations from Lockheed Martin’s human-rated, deep-space Orion vehicle that will fly on the Artemis I and II missions soon. A consistent cockpit experience and training from Orion to the AE makes the end-to-end mission safer for Artemis. The Transfer Element, a propulsive stage that starts the lander on its descent trajectory from lunar orbit, is based on Northrop Grumman's Cygnus vehicle that provides logistics resupply to the International Space Station; and Draper provides descent guidance and avionics to the National Team. It’s time to go back to the Moon – to stay.

Learn more here: bit.ly/3gcs1iP
Blue Origin-Led HLS National Teams Mission to the MoonFlight Four – One Chute OutNS-20 Pre-Mission Interview: Lead Flight Director, Nicholas PatrickReplay: New Shepard Mission NS-25 WebcastInside look at the New Glenn 7 meter fairingFlight Test - Goddard Low-Altitude Mission - LaunchReplay: New Shepard Mission NS-22 WebcastOrigin Stories: Carmen L. De Leon-AcostaExperience XEEx: Home of the BE-4 Rocket Engine

Blue Origin-Led HLS National Team's Mission to the Moon @blueorigin

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