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NASA will send your name around the moon. Here's how to sign up

NASA will send your name around the moon. Here's how to sign up
get ready to do donuts and drag race with your friends on the moon. Okay. Maybe not that extreme, but the newly unveiled prototype of the moon buggy is getting a major upgrade that is if this L. A. Startup has anything to say about it venturi. Astro Lab inc revealed new imagery of what it's calling the flexible logistics and exploration vehicles flex for short, they've been testing it on the closest thing we have for the moon here on earth at California's Desert Valley National Park. The hope is the new buggy could be used by 2025 for lunar colonization before heading to MARS the four wheeled car sized flex rover as a vast upgrade from Nasa's 19 seventies. Apollo era moon buggy for one thing, it can be driven by astronauts or by remote control at just over £1100 flex has the same cargo capacity as a light duty pickup, but with enough solar power to drive eight hours straight and handle those extreme temperatures. Flex is designed to support a 10 year life on the moon. Nasa is interested in having a sustained human presence. Ultimately on the moon, retired Canadian astronaut Chris Hadfield gave it a thumbs up saying he was a huge fan but maybe hold off on the donuts for now, topping out at 11 MPH here on Earth is still the same on the moon
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NASA will send your name around the moon. Here's how to sign up
You may have a slim chance of traveling to outer space, but at least your name can go.Video above: Donuts in Space? New Moon Buggy Prototype Gets Thumbs Up From Space VetNASA is collecting names to be put on a flash drive and sent into space on the Orion spacecraft, which is scheduled to launch later this year.The initiative is part of the agency's uncrewed Artemis I mission, which is the first mission of their Artemis program to eventually return astronauts to the moon.It's free to add your name to the flash drive, said NASA spokesperson Kathryn Hambleton."We hope this is a way to get people excited and to bring them along and inspire the next generation, the Artemis generation," Hambleton said.On this particular mission, the flash drive needs to be packed on the spacecraft about a month before the launch date, which will determine how long NASA will accept submissions, she said.A launch date has not been announced, but the space agency is shooting for a date in May or June, Hambleton said. NASA plans to announce more details about the launch date in the coming weeks, she added.Since opening the submissions earlier this month, NASA has already received over one million names, according to Hambleton."We're hoping to keep up this momentum of just a little over a week ago ... to gather many more names and generate more excitement from people around the globe that are going to ride along virtually," she said.The Artemis I missionThis first mission in the Artemis program, which will not carry any humans, will test out NASA's latest deep space exploration systems.The Orion spacecraft will launch on the most powerful rocket in the world from Launch Complex 39B at Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida.It will travel over 280,000 miles from Earth on a four- to six-week mission that will extend thousands of miles past the moon — the furthest that a spacecraft built for humans has ever gone, according to NASA.After the spacecraft completes its loop around the moon, Orion will attempt to land safely off the coast of Baja California, Mexico.Upon its return to Earth, the spacecraft would have traveled in excess of 1.3 million miles, according to NASA.NASA's second mission will test different parts of Orion, and it will include humans on board.

You may have a slim chance of traveling to outer space, but at least your name can go.

Video above: Donuts in Space? New Moon Buggy Prototype Gets Thumbs Up From Space Vet

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NASA is and sent into space on the Orion spacecraft, which is scheduled to launch later this year.

The initiative is part of the agency's uncrewed Artemis I mission, which is the first mission of their Artemis program to eventually return astronauts to the moon.

It's free to add your name to the flash drive, said NASA spokesperson Kathryn Hambleton.

"We hope this is a way to get people excited and to bring them along and inspire the next generation, the Artemis generation," Hambleton said.

On this particular mission, the flash drive needs to be packed on the spacecraft about a month before the launch date, which will determine how long NASA will accept submissions, she said.

A launch date has not been announced, but the space agency is shooting for a date in May or June, Hambleton said. NASA plans to announce more details about the launch date in the coming weeks, she added.

Since opening the submissions earlier this month, NASA has already received over one million names, according to Hambleton.

"We're hoping to keep up this momentum of just a little over a week ago ... to gather many more names and generate more excitement from people around the globe that are going to ride along virtually," she said.

The Artemis I mission

This first mission in the Artemis program, which will not carry any humans, will test out NASA's latest deep space exploration systems.

The Orion spacecraft will launch on the most powerful rocket in the world from Launch Complex 39B at Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida.

It will travel over 280,000 miles from Earth on a four- to six-week mission that will extend thousands of miles past the moon — the furthest that a spacecraft built for humans has ever gone,

After the spacecraft completes its loop around the moon, Orion will attempt to land safely off the coast of Baja California, Mexico.

Upon its return to Earth, the spacecraft would have traveled in excess of 1.3 million miles, according to NASA.

NASA's will test different parts of Orion, and it will include humans on board.