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The 

Artemis program is a robotic and human Moon exploration program led by the United States' National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) with three
partner agencies: European Space Agency (ESA), Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), and Canadian Space Agency (CSA). If successful, the Artemis program
will reestablish a human presence on the Moon for the first time since the Apollo 17 mission in 1972. The major components of the program are the Space Launch
System (SLS), Orion spacecraft, Lunar Gateway space station and the commercial Human Landing Systems, including Starship HLS. The program's long-term goal is to
establish a permanent base camp on the Moon and facilitate human missions to Mars.

The Artemis program is a collaboration of government space agencies and private spaceflight companies, bound together by the Artemis Accords and supporting
contracts. As of July 2022, twenty-one countries have signed the accords,[6] including traditional U.S. space partners (such as the European Space Agency as well as
agencies from Canada, Japan, and the United Kingdom) and emerging space powers such as Brazil, South Korea, and the United Arab Emirates.[7]

The Artemis program was formally established in 2017 during the Trump administration; however, many of its components such as the Orion spacecraft were developed
during the previous Constellation program (2005–2010) during Bush administration, and after its cancellation during Obama administration. Orion's first launch, and the
first use of the Space Launch System, was originally set in 2016, but was scheduled to launch in 2022 as the Artemis 1 mission, with robots and mannequins aboard.
According to plan, the crewed Artemis 2 launch will take place in 2024, the Artemis 3 crewed lunar landing in 2025, the Artemis 4 docking with the Lunar Gateway in 2027,
and future yearly landings on the Moon thereafter. However, some observ

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