And nearly every country with a space program is vying for a spot there – for a chance to explore the shadowy, polar craters in hopes of finding usable quantities of water ice.
On Wednesday, the Indian Space Research Organisation successfully landed its Chandrayaan-3 probe near the moon’s south pole. It was the first time India had landed a spacecraft on the moon, and the first time any country had successfully landed at the coveted moon’s south pole.
Many have tried including, Japan, Israel, and most recently Russia, whose Luna-25 spacecraft crashed onto the surface just days before India’s successful landing.
NASA is preparing its ARTEMIS mission to return to the moon. Luxembourg and Saudi Arabia have also set their sites on moon missions.
A new space race is underway. But why exactly are we racing to the moon again?
NPR’s Scott Detrow speaks to space lawyer Michelle Hanlon to find out.
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