Over the span of a few short months in 2026, NASA’s Artemis III mission lost its original purpose, but gained a crew and some controversy over its composition.In February 2026, as its predecessor Artemis II was experiencing launch delays, NASA announced the addition of a mission between Artemis II and the first Artemis lunar landing, originally set for Artemis III. This change meant Artemis III would no longer land at the lunar south pole.The reason for the shift was concerns about safety. NASA wanted an extra mission to test out the technology the crew would later use for a lunar landing. The agency released the new Artemis III mission objectives in May 2026, and in June it announced the crew: Andre Douglas, Randy Bresnik and Frank Rubio from NASA, as well as Luca Parmitano from the European Space Agency.AdvertisementAdvertisementAs planetary geologists, my colleagues and I are excited by this next phase of lunar exploration as humans get closer to the prospect of in-person fieldwork on the Moon again. Douglas’ work at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory overlapped with spacecraft exploration programs some of my colleagues participated in as scientists.Crewed and robotic spaceflight communities are typically small, given the training required for careers in the related science, engineering or operations projects. Personnel overlap between crewed and robotic projects, like in Douglas’ case, is another point of pride within the space exploration community.Artemis III is planned to launch in late 2027 at the earliest, with Artemis IV still slated to land on the Moon in 2028.A late 2027 launch would allow up to about 18 months of training together for this specific crew. Like any astronaut crew, the resume of each of these astronauts reads like a greatest hits list of science, technology, engineering and math, or STEM, training, including aviation in civilian and military contexts. Douglas, who has yet to fly in space, was an alternate for the Artemis II crew.[embedded content]Artemis program reshufflingIf the scheduling and numbering changes to the Artemis program seem confusing, it is because they are. Artemis III, when first announced, was slated to land on the Moon in 2024. Engineering readiness factors have caused much of this delay.AdvertisementAdvertisementArtemis I, the first test of the current Orion crew vehicle in space, resulted in heat shield damage beyond initial expectations.The purpose of any heat shield is to be sure the extreme temperatures that objects hitting Earth’s atmosphere experience don’t harm the crew or cargo inside the vehicle. It is like a Styrofoam cup, except instead of preventing coffee that’s around 212 degrees Fahrenheit (100 degrees Celsius) from burning your hand, it deals with atmospheric reentry temperatures that can can reach 5,000 degrees F (2,760 degrees C).Instead of actual Styrofoam, Artemis missions use the material Avcoat, which slowly burns away, transferring heat away from the Orion crew capsule. The importance of heat shields to human crews has a significant and sad legacy: One of the two fatal Space Shuttle accidents was due to damage taken on the shuttle’s heat tiles, a different heat shield material than Artemis uses, during launch.The Artemis II’s heat shield appears to have survived its passage through the Earth’s atmosphere better than Artemis I’s, though NASA has not yet released its final report. Officials cited the heat shield concerns as part of the need to add additional testing in space to the Artemis timeline.AdvertisementAdvertisementFor the Artemis program, NASA has contracted both SpaceX and Blue Origin to develop lunar landers. Neither of the SpaceX or Blue Origin landers have landed on the Moon with or without a crew, and Artemis III now is now partially focused on testing the interfaces between the Orion crew capsule, which transports the astronauts while in space, and the shortlisted lander systems.The biggest proof of safety for any spaceflight system is working successfully in space. The delays and reshuffling in the Artemis program reflect the complex nature of engineering in challenging environments.A savvy observer may point out that NASA has landed humans on the Moon before, and that is fair. However, Apollo 17’s crew left the Moon in the year when Don McLean’s “American Pie” topped the U.S. Billboard music charts and the Senate passed the Equal Rights Amendment.People …