- There’s no shortage of both robotic and manned missions to space in 2024
- READ MORE: All you need to know about NASA’s trip around the moon and back
2023 shaped up to be an amazing year for space missions, from NASA’s return of fragments of a faraway asteroid to India landing on the moon’s south pole.
And now it seems the world’s space agencies and billion-dollar private firms are already looking forward to an even more prolific year.
Among them are NASA, which is finally returning to the moon after 40 years, and Blue Origin which is sending an all-female crew into orbit.
There’s also the chance of the first ever all-British mission to space and the first phase of SpaceX’s ambitious Polaris Dawn programme.
Here’s a look at the big space launches of 2024 that you won’t want to miss.
ARTEMIS II
It’s been more than four decades, but NASA is finally returning to the moon.
Possibly the biggest space launch in 2024 is Artemis II, scheduled for November, which will mark NASA’s first trip to the moon since the Apollo programme of the 1970s.
But rather than landing on the lunar surface, Artemis II will fly around it.
Four astronauts aboard NASA’s Orion spacecraft will do a loop around it before returning to Earth.
In doing so, Artemis II should smash the record for the furthest distance travelled from Earth by humans (set by Artemis I in 2022).
Artemis II will also set the stage for Artemis III, which will take place in December 2025, providing there aren’t any further delays.
Artemis III will put humans on the moon for the first time since Apollo 17 in 1972.
Both follow the success of Artemis I in 2022, which looped the Orion capsule around the moon but without any humans inside.
Instead, on-board were three manikins and several trinkets chosen by NASA including a Dead Sea pebble, 567 American flags and a Shaun the Sheep mascot.
NASA sees Artemis as laying the foundation for both international space agencies and private companies to build a lunar settlement and economy, and from there eventually send humans to Mars.
BLUE ORIGIN’S ALL-FEMALE CREW
Spaceflight history should be made in 2024 when an all-female crew goes into orbit for the first time.
The flight will be operated by Blue Orbit, the company headed by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos – but he won’t be on it, and nor will any other male for that matter.
Lauren Sanchez, Bezos’ girlfriend has said she will lead the mission in early 2024 and will be accompanied by five other women, whose identifies are yet to be revealed.
They will fly on New Shepard, Blue Origin’s phallic-shaped fully reusable sub-orbital vehicle, which flew for the first time in 15 months in December.
Sanchez is known in the US as a media personality and news anchor, but she’s also a licensed helicopter pilot and the founder of Black Ops Aviation, a female-owned aerial film and production company.
Although Sanchez has no experience as an astronaut, this should not be an issue, as the aim of Blue Origin is to send normal civilians into space.
Bezos wants to pioneer an era of commercialised space travel, although Blue Origin customers are currently having to pay several million dollars for the experience.
After blasting off, travellers travel at the speed of sound past the Karman line (the boundary between Earth’s atmosphere and outer space).
They then float weightless for several minutes and ‘witness life-changing views’ of Earth, before descending gently under parachutes.
Jeff Bezos was aboard the first crewed Blue Origin mission to space on July 20, 2021 and there have been another five crewed flights since.
NEW GLENN
Blue Origin is also working on a bigger rocket, New Glenn, which is 320 feet tall and able to carry payloads of 45 metric tons to low Earth orbit.
That’s more than double that of SpaceX’s Falcon 9, but still less than its rival’s Falcon Heavy, which manages 63.8 metric tons.
A spokesperson for New Glenn at Blue Origin told AFP: ‘We expect to fly in 2024.’
One of the first flights will launch the NASA probe EscaPADE on a mission to study the magnetosphere of Mars.
New Glenn is also an essential element of the lunar landing system ordered by NASA for the Artemis 5 lunar mission of 2029, which will launch four astronauts to the Gateway Space Station.
The vehicle is named after John Glenn, the first American to orbit the Earth.
GALACTIC 06
One of the first space missions of the year will be Galactic 06, the next commercial launch by Blue Origin’s rival, Virgin Galactic.
Similarly, Virgin Galactic sends a small group of tourists into space for the trip of a lifetime on the Unity spacecraft, although they have to spend millions of dollars for the pleasure.
The ‘Galactic 06’ mission, expected to take place in January 2024, will carry four paying private astronauts for the first time, Virgin Galactic confirmed to MailOnline.
The company hopes adding an extra seat on the flight will increase revenue per flight to between $1.8 million (£1.4 million) to $2.4 million (£1.8 million).
It’s only a few months since the first paying tourist, retired British Olympian Jon Goodwin, 80, got his flight into space aboard Unity.
Mr Goodwin paid $250,000 (£191,000) for his ticket to space back in 2005.
Rather than a ‘classic’ vertical rocket launch that you might expect from NASA or SpaceX, Virgin Galactic employs a different method.
It uses a carrier aircraft called White Knight Two with two pilots who take off from a runway and then gain high altitude.
White Knight Two then releases its rocket-powered crewed spaceplane VSS Unity, which ignites its rocket motor and soars even higher.
VSS Unity is able to reach the boundary of space as defined by the US Air Force and NASA by going over 50 miles above sea level – although this is short of the Kármán line, the conventionally-accepted boundary.
POLARIS DAWN
Meanwhile, SpaceX is busy with Polaris Dawn, a ‘first-of-its-kind’ private astronaut mission to space that will happen no earlier than April.
It will fly a team of four US engineers and pilots aboard the Crew Dragon, a reusable aircraft designed by the firm Elon Musk found in 2002.
It includes Jared Isaacman, a billionaire entrepreneur and commander of Inspiration4, a private spaceflight using SpaceX’s Crew Dragon Resilience in September 2021.
For Polaris Dawn, Isaacman and his crew will spend up to five days in orbit, flying higher than any Dragon mission to date and also attempting to reach the highest Earth orbit ever flown.
They will also conduct a spacewalk and support scientific research designed to advance ‘understanding of human health during future long-duration spaceflights’.
Polaris Dawn is the first of three missions in a programme that will culminate in the first crewed launch of Starship – the most powerful rocket ever built.
SpaceX will continue to test its Starship mega-rocket in 2024, after the first two flights ended in them blowing up.
GAGANYAAN
India’s space agency will be capitalising on its recent successes with the first four missions of its Gaganyaan space programme.
Gaganyaan I, II and III, all scheduled throughout 2024, will send an uncrewed spacecraft into orbit from Satish Dhawan Space Centre.
Should all go to plan, Gaganyaan IV – likely taking place in the fourth quarter of the year – will carry a three-member crew into an orbit of 400 km (250 miles) for three days, before splashing down in the Indian Ocean.
On-board the crewed and uncrewed flights will also be Vyommitra, a humanoid robot specially designed for Gaganyaan.
India’s space agency, ISRO, has said it will explore ways to achieve a sustained human presence in space once Gaganyaan is completed.
About 90 billion Indian rupees ($1 billion) has been allocated for the mission, which follows the agency’s historic landing of its Chandrayaan-3 craft on the lunar south pole.
The country also successfully launched its first space mission to study the sun in September.
CHANG’E 6
Perhaps buoyed by India’s success, China will be sending its lunar exploration spacecraft Chang’e 6 to the moon this year.
In May, the craft will attempt to obtain the first ever soil and rock samples from the far side of the moon and return them to Earth.
The following mission, Chang’e 7 scheduled for 2026, has the lunar south pole as its destination.
It follows the Chang’e-5 mission to the moon in November 2020, which collected and returned the first samples of lunar soil in 45 years.
Chang’e-5 returned lunar rock samples to Earth that date back 2 billion years, analysis later found.
UK SPACE MISSION
2024 could also be the year of the first all-British space mission, recently confirmed by the UK Space Agency.
Major Time Peake is rumoured to be mission commander for the four-person flight, which will head to the International Space Station (ISS) before returning after two weeks.
It would mark a spectacular U-turn after Major Peake announced his retirement as an astronaut a year ago.
Meanwhile, the most likely contenders for the three other spots are the Brits recently selected for the ESA’s astronaut programme in 2023.
They are John McFall, 42, a surgical trainee and Paralympic medallist; Meganne Christian, 35, a materials scientist originally from Kent; and Rosemary Coogan, 32, an astrophysicist from Northern Ireland.
Never before has a group of astronauts headed to space that have been made up entirely of Brits.
The date of the mission is unconfirmed, but the latter stages of next year are a definite possibility.
The UK Space Agency told MailOnline more information about the mission will be revealed in early 2024.
ARIANE 6
After years of delays, the European Space Agency (ESA) is expecting its £3 billion Ariane 6 rocket to finally launch in 2024, between June 15 and July 31.
The ESA’s Ariane programme consists of a series of transportation rockets designed to ferry heavy loads including satellites into space.
Its predecessor, Ariane 5, flew for the last time in July and the smaller Vega C remains grounded following a failure in December last year, leaving Europe without independent access to space.
Russia blocked European use of its Soyuz rockets last year in response to Western sanctions over Ukraine.
The Ariane 6 is designed to be a far more cost-effective version of the current Ariane 5 launcher and will be able to launch more frequently.
At 200 feet (60 metres) tall, Ariane 6 will weigh almost 900 tonnes when launched with a full payload – roughly equivalent to one and a half Airbus A380 passenger aeroplanes.
ESA nations agreed in 2014 to develop Ariane 6 in response to growing competition in the commercial launch market but its arrival, originally due in 2020, has been repeatedly delayed.
MOMO 2
India is also planning to launch an orbiter to Mars – a mission called Mars Orbiter Mission 2, or MOMO 2.
It’s a follow-up to the original MOMO mission which made India the first Asian nation to reach the Martian orbit and the first nation in the world to do so on its first attempt.
After launching in November 2013, the plucky Indian space probe was put into Mars orbit in September 2014 and was only declared dead in October 2022.
As the name suggests, MOMO 2 will not land on the red planet, but rather orbit it from a distance while gathering data about its weather, interplanetary dust, subsurface geology and more.
Insights from the space probe could help scientists understand the planet’s potential for future human exploration.
Dr. Thomas Hughes is a UK-based scientist and science communicator who makes complex topics accessible to readers. His articles explore breakthroughs in various scientific disciplines, from space exploration to cutting-edge research.