NASA Announces RETURN to the MOON with This SPECTACULAR Video

NASA announces the return to the moon with this spectacular video that explains many of the details of the mission to be carried out.

NASA is preparing to send people back to the Moon, the American space agency receiving the funds it needs to take people back to where they haven't been in a very long time, unfortunately. Artemis is the project through which NASA wants to return people to the Moon, and Orion is the name of the ship in which the astronauts will stay to be transported to the natural satellite of the Earth, more than 300.000 KM away from the planet.

In the video clip above, NASA presents the ship that will be sent to the Moon in 2024, along with a variety of details regarding the very powerful rocket it will use for this mission. NASA also explains the entire launch procedure through which the rocket and its ship will pass for the journey in outer space and to reach the Moon, detailing each step to be taken by its astronauts.

NASA Announces RETURN to the MOON with This SPECTACULAR Video

NASA also explains what kind of space hub it wants to make on the Moon so that people can then be sent to the planet Mars, revealing that the natural satellite will be a starting point towards the distant red planet. NASA also wants to make a colony on the Moon in order to be able to send more astronauts to Mars in the coming years, and again we have very clear explanations about how all these missions will be carried out.

NASA offers these explanations because it wants people to become more and more interested in this very important mission that will bring astronauts back to Earth's natural satellite. It is very important for everyone to know how this whole process will unfold, and in this way we will understand much better how the missions that will bring people back to the planet Mars about a decade from now will take place.

NASA has many other plans regarding the exploration of outer space, so it will be very interesting to see what will be revealed by the American space agency in the coming years.