The public has picked ‘Moonikin Campos’ as the name for the manikin set to be launched on NASA‘s Artemis test flight around the Moon later this year.
The name is a dedication to Arturo Campos, an electrical engineer for NASA and a key player in bringing Apollo 13 safely back to Earth in April 1970.
The manikin will launch on Artemis I, NASA’s uncrewed flight test of the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion spacecraft, from Kennedy Space Center in Florida on November 22.
NASA’s Artemis programme will land the first woman and the next man on the moon by 2024, specifically at the lunar south pole region.
It is also hoped that establishing a sustainable lunar presence will ultimately be used as a ‘stepping stone’ for the first human mission to Mars.
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Pictured, engineers use a suited manikin to conduct vibration testing at Kennedy Space Center. The manikin will fly aboard the Orion spacecraft during the Artemis I mission, an uncrewed flight test flight due for November. All importantly, the manikin, or ‘Moonikin’, now has a name – Campos, after former NASA engineer Arturo Campos
Arturo Campos (1934-2004) was an electrical power subsystem manager for the Apollo 13 lunar module – and his heroics were crucial for returning the three astronauts on board back to Earth
‘Our return to the moon through Artemis is a global effort – and we’re always looking at new ways to engage the public in our missions,’ said Brian Odom, NASA’s acting chief historian at Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.
‘This contest, which is helping pave the way for a human return to the Moon, also honours an important individual in our NASA family – Arturo Campos.
‘It is a fitting tribute that the data gained from Artemis I will help us prepare to fly astronauts – including the first woman and first person of colour – to the moon, where we will get ready for Mars.’
The male-bodied manikin, previously used in Orion vibration tests, received its name as the result of a competitive bracket contest honouring NASA figures, programs or astronomical objects.
NASA received more than 300,000 votes throughout the bracket tournament.
The final bracket challenge was between Campos and Delos, a reference to the island where Apollo and Artemis were born, according to Greek mythology.
Some of the other options were Duhart, a dedication to Irene Duhart Long, chief medical officer at Kennedy Space Center.
Another was Shackleton, a nod to a crater on the moon’s south pole and a reference to the famous explorer Ernest Shackleton, who led three British expeditions to the Antarctic in the early 20th century.
But Arturo Campos, a Texan native who proved the hero in the mission to get the Apollo 13 astronauts safely back to Earth, came out tops.
Campos’s plan to provide Apollo 13’s command module with enough electrical power to navigate home safely earned him the honour.
Apollo 13 was launched from Kennedy Space Center in Florida on April 11, 1970, with the aim of becoming the third spacecraft to land on the moon.
However, an on-board explosion ended any chances of reaching the moon and set a new challenge for the three astronauts – Jim Lovell, Jack Swigert and Fred Haise.
Campos received a phone call on April 13, 1970 telling him something had happened to the spacecraft and that he needed to report to work immediately.
Upon arrival, Campos learned that a service module oxygen tank aboard the Apollo spacecraft had ruptured.
The command module’s normal supply of electricity, light, and water was lost, leaving the astronauts stuck in a crippled spacecraft about 200,000 miles (about 320,000 km) from Earth.
Campos immediately got to work reconstructing his plan to provide the command module with enough electrical power to navigate home safely.
For his heroic efforts, Campos and other members of mission control were awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Richard Nixon in 1970.
Campos the manikin, or ‘Moonikin’ as NASA puts it, will occupy the commander’s seat inside and wear an Orion Crew Survival System suit.
Lovell (left), Swigert (centre) and Haise (right) sit together as they prepare for re-entry through Earth’s atmosphere on April 17, 1970, after an oxygen tank rupture turned Apollo 13 into a survival mission
This April 17, 1970 photo shows the severely damaged Apollo 13 service module after separation from the lunar module/command module. An entire panel on the service module was blown away by the explosion of an oxygen tank
This is the very same spacesuit that Artemis astronauts will use during launch, entry and other dynamic phases of their missions from 2024.
Campos will be equipped with two radiation sensors and have additional sensors under its headrest and behind its seat to record acceleration and vibration data throughout the mission.
Data from the Moonikin’s experience will help NASA protect astronauts during Artemis II, the first mission in more than 50 years that will send crew around the moon.
Artemis I on Mobile Launcher (artist concept). The uncrewed test flight is due for launch on November 22 this year
There were eight names to choose from in NASA’s bracket contest. The final bracket challenge was between Campos and Delos, a reference to the island where Apollo and Artemis were born, according to Greek mythology
Artemis II is currently scheduled to be launched by the Space Launch System in September 2023.
Campos the Moonikin is actually one of three dummy ‘passengers’ flying aboard Orion to test the spacecraft’s systems.
Two female-bodied model human torsos – named Zohar and Helga by the Israel Space Agency (ISA) and the German Aerospace Center (DLR) respectively – will also be aboard.
Zohar and Helga will support the Matroshka AstroRad Radiation Experiment (MARE), an experiment to provide data on radiation levels during lunar missions.
In April 2020, NASA released a detailed plan for an ‘Artemis Base Camp’ that will be home to first woman and next man on the moon in 2024.
The 13-page document highlights elements such as a terrain vehicle for transporting the astronauts around the landing zone, a permanent habit and a mobility platform to travel across the lunar surface.
The original Apollo astronauts remain the only humans to have been sent into deep space.
The celebrated program saw men walk on the moon for the last time in 1972, as part of the Apollo 17 mission.
After returning humans to the Moon in 2024, NASA plans to send astronauts to the moon once per year and establish lunar exploration by 2028.
The program will lay the groundwork in NASA’s plans to send crewed missions to the Mars in the 2030s.