In 1984, with the
Space Shuttle in service, a team based at the
Johnson Space Center made a feasibility study for NASA's return to the
Moon. It anticipated later studies in using NASA's planned infrastructure the Shuttle, a Shuttle-derived heavy lift vehicle, a space station, and an orbital transfer vehicle to build a permanent 18-crew moon base sometime between 2005 and 2015.
Design details
The Space Shuttle would transport the empty 21,000-kilogram lunar lander and payload to the space station, where they would rendezvous with the 100 ton propellant module.
The first objective was the creation of small semipermanently manned "camp" on the lunar surface in 2005-2006.
NASA would have launched a lunar orbiting space station in 2008-2009 to support the creation of a permanently manned moonbase by 2009-2010.
This operational surface base would have contained an expanded mining facility, lunar materials processing pilot plants and a lunar agriculture research laboratory; pilot oxygen production and experimental mining facilities would have been landed previously.
Layout
The lunar surface facility would have grown to an 18-crew "advanced base" in 2013-14, consisting of five habitation modules, a geochemical laboratory, chemical/biological lab, geochemical/petrology lab, a particle accelerator, a radio telescope, lunar oxygen, ceramics and metallurgy plants, two shops, three power units (90% lunar-materials derived), one earthmover/crane and three...
Read More