Want to be part of a space mission from Earth? NASA seeks volunteers

The solid rocket boosters for the Artemis II Space Launch System (SLS) Core Stage are readied in NASA's Vehicle Assembly Building at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on February 25, 2025. Engineers have completed stacking the twin SLS boosters as lunar launch preparations continue. The Artemis II crewed test flight will be a 10-day journey around the Moon, currently scheduled for April 2026. (Photo by Gregg Newton / AFP) (Photo by GREGG NEWTON/AFP via Getty Images) (GREGG NEWTON, AFP or licensors)

If you’ve ever wanted to be part of a space mission, you may finally get that chance—without leaving Earth.

According to its website, NASA is seeking “volunteers to passively track the Artemis II Orion spacecraft as the crewed mission travels to the Moon and back to Earth."

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The mission, targeted for no later than April 2026, will mark the first crewed flight of the agency’s Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion spacecraft.

This opportunity builds on a similar effort during Artemis I in 2022, when 10 volunteers, including international space agencies, academic institutions, commercial companies, nonprofits, and private citizens, successfully tracked the uncrewed Orion spacecraft thousands of miles beyond the Moon.

Using ground antennas, participants received Orion’s signal and measured changes in its transmitted radio waves.

With Artemis II, NASA aims to better understand commercial and community tracking capabilities as it leans more heavily on industry partnerships. The mission will still rely on NASA’s Near Space and Deep Space Networks for primary communication and tracking during launch, orbit, and reentry.

“By offering this opportunity to the broader aerospace community, we can identify available tracking capabilities outside the government,” Kevin Coggins, deputy associate administrator for NASA’s SCaN program, said. “This data will help inform our transition to a commercial-first approach, ultimately strengthening the infrastructure needed to support Artemis missions and our long-term Moon to Mars objectives.”

Read more about the opportunity by clicking here.


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