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September 16, 2024
Electrifying the Artemis Era: NASA’s Gateway Propulsion System Testing Throttles Up
Science

Electrifying the Artemis Era: NASA’s Gateway Propulsion System Testing Throttles Up

Sep 5, 2024
Gateway Propulsion System Testing
NASA’s Gateway, a lunar orbiting outpost, is conducting electric propulsion system tests on its Power and Propulsion Element (PPE). Credit: NASA

NASA’s Gateway station is testing its Power and Propulsion Element (PPE), built by Maxar, which will provide power, communications, and propulsion. The PPE will join HALO, and together they’ll launch aboard a SpaceX Falcon Heavy in late 2024.

The powerhouse of Gateway, NASA’s orbiting outpost around the Moon and a critical piece of infrastructure for Artemis, is in the midst of several electric propulsion system tests.

The Power and Propulsion Element (PPE), being manufactured by Maxar Technologies, provides Gateway with power, high-rate communications, and propulsion for maneuvers around the Moon and to transit between different orbits. The PPE will be combined with the Habitation and Logistic Outpost (HALO) before the integrated spacecraft’s launch, targeted for late 2024 aboard a SpaceX Falcon Heavy. Together, these elements will serve as the hub for early Gateway crewed operations and various science and technology demonstrations as the full Gateway station is assembled around it in the coming years.

In this image, PPE engineers successfully tested the integration of Aerojet Rocketdyne’s thruster with Maxar’s power procession unit and Xenon Flow Controller.

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