Back to Guardian
Subscribe
News
National
Africa
World
Opinion
Did Duke University students walk out of graduation because, lecturer, Jerry Seinfeld is Jewish?
Warding Off Scammers
Press freedom under attack, watchdog index shows
Fashion
Sport
Entertainment
Comedy
Music
Film
Science & Tech
GTV Exclusive
NASA’s Artemis program aims to put first woman on moon
10:57 AM,
May 25, 2019
Abiodun Ogundairo
Science & Tech
[vvideo code=”5G79C0BO” autoplay=”yes”]
Share Video
Facebook
Twitter
Pinterest
Linkedin
Whatsapp
Reddit
Email
NASA's Artemis program to return astronauts to the moon is to include eight rocket launches to put a mini space station in lunar orbit by 2024. That's when it hopes to land its first female astronaut on lunar soil.
Prev
Previous
Next
Next
Tags
female astronaut
NASA
More From Guardian TV
Menopause: Supporting women through hormonal changes
10 hours ago
Science & Tech
CO2 tax: A game changer for the climate?
15 hours ago
Science & Tech
Will Google’s Power fade soon?
19 hours ago
Science & Tech
Will Brazil’s ban on X mark a turning point for tech giants?
2 days ago
Science & Tech
Final launch before Europe’s new Vega-C rocket takes over
2 days ago
Science & Tech
Easter Island leads the fight against plastic pollution
4 days ago
Science & Tech
News
National
Africa
World
Opinion
Fashion
Sport
Entertainment
Comedy
Music
Film
Science & Tech
Interview
Talks
Sponsored
GTV Exclusive
Don't Miss
Are two NASA astronauts stuck in space and how can they come home?
1,168,790 voters for Lagos East bye-elections — INEC, CBN retains lending rate at 11.5%