Audio By Carbonatix
The US space agency (Nasa) has formally outlined its $28bn (£22bn) plan to return to the Moon by 2024.
As part of a programme called Artemis, Nasa will send a man and a woman to the lunar surface in the first landing with humans since 1972.
But the agency's timeline is contingent on Congress releasing $3.2bn for the agency to build a landing system.
Astronauts will travel in an Apollo-like capsule called Orion that will launch on a powerful rocket called SLS.
Speaking on Monday afternoon (US time), Nasa administrator Jim Bridenstine said: "The $28bn represents the costs associated for the next four years in the Artemis programme to land on the Moon.
SLS funding, Orion funding, the human landing system and of course the spacesuits all of those things that are part of the Artemis programme are included."
But he explained: "The budget request that we have before the House and the Senate right now includes $3.2bn for 2021 for the human landing system. It is critically important that we get that $3.2bn."
The US House of Representatives has already passed a Bill allocating $600m towards the lunar lander. But Nasa will need more funds to develop the vehicle in full.
Mr Bridenstine added: "I want to be clear, we are exceptionally grateful to the House of Representatives that, in a bipartisan way, they have determined that funding a human landing system is important that's what that $600m represents. It is also true that we are asking for the full $3.2bn."
The new document outlines Phase 1 of the plan, which includes an uncrewed test flight around the Moon called Artemis-1 - in the autumn of 2021.
Nasa's human spaceflight chief Kathy Lueders said that Artemis-1 would last for about a month to test out all the critical systems.
She said that demonstration flight would reduce the risk for Artemis-2, which will repeat the trip around the Moon with astronauts.
A new test has been added to this mission - a proximity operations demonstration.
Shortly after Orion separates from the upper stage of the SLS rocket known as the interim cryogenic propulsion stage astronauts will manually pilot the spacecraft as they approach and back away from the stage.
This will assess Orion's handling qualities, along with the performance of the spacecraft's hardware and software.
Artemis-3 will become the first mission to send astronauts to the lunar surface since Apollo 17 some 48 years ago.
Latest Stories
-
VSA, VIA renew commitment to digital security after visit to Kufuor
35 minutes -
IMF projects Ghana’s debt-to-GDP to rise to 53% by 2026 despite recent gains
56 minutes -
NAIMOS cracks down on galamsey surge at Gwira Banso, destroys heavy equipment in Nzema East operations
1 hour -
Catholic Church in Upper West offers silos to boost food security drive
1 hour -
Worst excesses of judicial manipulation behind us – Tsatsu Tsikata
2 hours -
God meant it for good that I was imprisoned – Tsatsu Tsikata on ‘amazing grace’ moment
2 hours -
Domestic workers legally recognised in Indonesia after ’22-year struggle’
2 hours -
I could have been dead – Tsatsu Tsikata reflects on prison, pain and ‘amazing grace’
2 hours -
I didn’t put those talents in myself – Tsatsu Tsikata credits God for legal brilliance
3 hours -
Nigeria’s Dangote taps Honeywell to expand plastics and detergent petrochems
3 hours -
At Senegal forum, Niger and Mali say neighbours sponsor terrorism
3 hours -
Nigeria’s president names Taiwo Oyedele as new finance minister
4 hours -
Los Angeles schools set limits on classroom screen time
4 hours -
Trump buys time for Iran deal after frantic day of diplomacy
4 hours -
Asiedu Nketia breaks self-imposed media silence, hails Lambussie FM as tool for local voice
4 hours