• Artemis III Crew Named: Veteran Astronauts to test Lunar Landers in LE

    From NasaSpaceFlight@1337:1/100 to All on Tuesday, June 09, 2026 18:00:05
    Artemis III Crew Named: Veteran Astronauts to test Lunar Landers in LEO

    Date:
    Tue, 09 Jun 2026 16:56:31 +0000

    Description:
    NASA has assigned the four astronauts who will fly the agencys next crewed Space Launch The post Artemis III Crew Named: Veteran Astronauts to test
    Lunar Landers in LEO appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .

    FULL STORY ======================================================================

    NASA has assigned the four astronauts who will fly the agencys next crewed Space Launch System mission, an Earth-orbit test flight designed to evaluate one or both human-rated lunar landers before the Artemis III landing attempt currently targeted for late 2026.

    Commanding the mission will be NASA astronaut Randy Bresnik, with ESA astronaut Luca Parmitano serving as pilot. NASA astronauts Frank Rubio and Andre Douglas round out the crew as Mission Specialists 1 and 2,
    respectively.

    The flight, known internally as Artemis III-Prime or a similar designation in current planning, will launch aboard the SLS rocket and Orion spacecraft into low-Earth orbit.

    There, the crew will conduct rendezvous, docking, and operations with one or both lander vehicleslikely including Starship HLS derivatives or other competing designsgathering critical data to de-risk the subsequent lunar landing mission. INTRODUCING: ARTEMIS III

    Commander, Randy Bresnik Pilot, Luca Parmitano Mission Specialist 1, Frank Rubio Mission Specialist 2, Andre Douglas @NASASpaceflight pic.twitter.com/s6M8jCeN11

    Ryan Caton (@dpoddolphinpro) June 9, 2026



    Commander: Randy Bresnik

    Randy Bresnik, a U.S. Marine Corps Colonel, has flown twice beforeonce on the Space Shuttle and once on Soyuz.

    He launched aboard STS-129 in November 2009 on Atlantis, performing two spacewalks in support of ISS construction. Randy Bresnik, far right in the STS-129 crew portrait.

    In 2017 he returned to the station on Soyuz MS-05 for a long-duration increment, conducting three more EVAs focused on Canadarm2 maintenance and other station upkeep, for a career total of 32 hours outside.

    Bresnik logged over 7,000 flight hours in 95 different aircraft types, including combat missions in the F/A-18 Hornet, and served as an instructor
    on the F/A-18, T-38, and T-2.

    His deep piloting background and station assembly experience make him well-suited for the piloting-intensive objectives of the Artemis III test flight.

    Pilot: Luca Parmitano

    Pilot Luca Parmitano, an Italian Air Force Colonel and European Space Agency astronaut, has flown two long-duration missions to the ISS.

    Selected in 2009, he first flew aboard Soyuz TMA-09M in 2013. That mission is remembered for a harrowing spacesuit anomaly during his second EVA when his helmet began filling with water due to a clogged filter in the cooling
    system.

    Parmitano and crewmate Chris Cassidy safely terminated the spacewalk and returned to the airlock despite water reaching his eyes, nose, and mouth, cutting off communications. Undeterred, Parmitano returned to the station in 2019 aboard Soyuz MS-13 and completed four additional EVAs, bringing his career total to six.

    A highly experienced test pilot with over 2,000 hours in more than 20 types
    of fixed- and rotary-wing aircraft (and flight experience in over 40), Parmitanos piloting expertise will be particularly relevant for evaluating Orions handling qualities during rendezvous and proximity operations with the lander vehicles.

    Mission Specialist 1: Frank Rubio

    Frank Rubio brings extensive spaceflight and operational experience to the commanders seat. A U.S. Army Colonel and former helicopter pilot with more than 1,100 flight hoursincluding 600 combat hours in Bosnia, Iraq, and AfghanistanRubio was selected by NASA in 2017.

    He previously flew a record-setting mission to the International Space
    Station aboard Soyuz MS-22, launching in September 2022.



    After a coolant leak forced the abandonment of the original Soyuz, Rubio and his crewmates spent 371 days in orbit, the longest single spaceflight by an American astronaut. During that mission, he also accumulated more than 21 hours of extravehicular activity (EVA) time.

    That long-duration endurance and EVA experience will be valuable for the extended Orion flight and complex operations planned for this test mission.

    Mission Specialist 2: Andre Douglas

    Andre Douglas, a U.S. Coast Guard Commander, is the only member of the crew without a prior spaceflight, but he is intimately familiar with the Artemis program.

    Selected as a NASA astronaut in December 2021, Douglas served as backup crew for Artemis II and was part of the closeout crew that strapped the prime crew into Orion for that missions launch. My brain is going a mile a minute right now, but my heart, it is so warm. It is so full.

    Artemis III mission specialist @Astro_AndreD reflects on his journey and the people in his life who have supported him along the way. pic.twitter.com/LMgJYO9BXg

    NASA (@NASA) June 9, 2026



    A Miami native, Douglass operational experience and recent intensive training with the Artemis II prime crew position him strongly for the demanding test objectives of this precursor flight.

    Mission Status and Timeline

    NASA provided a status update on the primary Artemis III lunar landing
    mission during the crew announcement event.

    The agency continues to work toward a late-2026 target for the first crewed lunar landing of the Artemis program, though exact dates remain under review as lander development and SLS/Orion flight schedules mature.

    The upcoming crewed Earth-orbit test flight will provide essential
    operational data on lander performance in the actual environment the Artemis III crew will encounter, helping ensure a safe and successful return to the lunar surface.

    (Lead Image via Ryan Caton graphic of the Artemis III crew).



    The post Artemis III Crew Named: Veteran Astronauts to test Lunar Landers in LEO appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .



    ======================================================================
    Link to news story: https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2026/06/artemis-iii-veteran-astronauts-test-lu nar-landers-leo/


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