When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.Two of the four RS-25 engines that will power the core stage of Artemis III’s Space Launch System rocket. | Credit: NASA/Cory HustonNASA is picking up the pace on its Artemis III mission preparations, pressing forward on multiple fronts to assemble launch vehicle hardware and beginning routine simulations inside Artemis mission control.The agency is “full steam ahead,” according to a July 13 NASA update. Across Kennedy Space Center (KSC) in Florida, components of Artemis III’s Space Launch System (SLS) rocket are coming together, undergoing tests and awaiting transportation for final integration ahead of next year’s launch. NASA is targeting mid-to-late 2027 for Artemis III, which will launch four astronauts into low Earth orbit (LEO) aboard the Orion spacecraft. It will be the second crewed mission of NASA’s Artemis program, which aims to establish a permanent human presence on the moon.AdvertisementAdvertisementArtemis III will be a critical stepping stone in NASA’s lunar landing architecture, despite the mission not actually flying to the moon. Instead, SLS will launch Orion and its four-person crew into LEO for rendezvous and docking operations with the program’s two commercial lunar lander vehicles: SpaceX’s Starship and Blue Origin’s Blue Moon spacecraft.With the completion of the massively successful Artemis II mission that flew astronauts around the moon in April and the second half of 2026 beginning to count down, NASA has shifted into full gear to complete assembly and testing of the hardware that will launch Artemis III.Several components for the mission’s SLS rocket have arrived in the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) at KSC. The SLS core stage was delivered at the end of April, and it was connected with the rocket’s engine block section in May. The first two of the core stage’s four RS-25 engines arrived in June and will be installed on the SLS engine block once the remaining two are delivered, after which NASA plans to begin integration with the mobile launch platform (MLP) and launch operations tests. A temporary weather cap was also delivered in June, which will protect the stage when NASA transports it to the launch pad for tests before the full vehicle is stacked.The bottom segments of both SLS solid rocket boosters (SRBs) were delivered over the last week, and they have been mounted on the MLP, according to NASA’s update. The upper SRB segments arrived at KSC via train in June and will undergo inspection and testing before the twin boosters are fully stacked.Per NASA: Artemis launch director Charlie Black …