TITUSVILLE, Fla. — The United Arab Emirates has agreed to develop an airlock module for the lunar Gateway, helping complete the design of the lunar space station while enhancing the UAE’s role in the Artemis lunar exploration effort.
NASA and the UAE’s Mohammed bin Rashid Space Centre (MBRSC) announced Jan. 7 that the UAE would contribute the Crew and Science Airlock for the Gateway. That module will allow Gateway crews to perform spacewalks outside the Gateway as well as install and retrieve external science payloads.
The announcement did not state when the airlock would be added to the Gateway, although Hamdan bin Mohammed, crown prince of Dubai, mentioned in a social media post that the project would be completed in 2030. As part of the agreement, the UAE will get a seat on a future Artemis mission.
“The United States and the United Arab Emirates are marking a historic moment in our nations’ collaboration in space, and the future of human space exploration,” NASA Administrator Bill Nelson said in a statement announcing the agreement. “The UAE’s provision of the airlock to Gateway will allow astronauts to conduct groundbreaking science in deep space and prepare to one day send humanity to Mars.”
The lunar Gateway was envisioned as an extension of the existing International Space Station partnership, with contributions from the United States, Europe, Japan and Canada. The Gateway will operate in a near-rectilinear halo orbit around the moon to support landings at the lunar south polar region. It will be built up over a series of missions, starting with the launch of a propulsion element and habitation module on a Falcon Heavy in 2025.
Russia originally was going to contribute the airlock module, but dropped out of the lunar Gateway program after the then-leader of Roscosmos, Dmitry Rogozin, claimed in 2021 that the project was too “U.S. centric” for his country. NASA officials said in late 2022 they were in…
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