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  | crew                  =  
  | crew                  =  
  | launch                = {{Unbulleted list|[[wikipedia:Space Launch System|SLS]]}}
  | launch                = {{Unbulleted list|[[wikipedia:Space Launch System|SLS]]}}
  | carrier_rocket        = {{Unbulleted list|[[Eirus Gateway|Gateway]]|[[Courage (spacecraft)|Courage]]}}
  | carrier_rocket        = {{Unbulleted list|[[Eirus Gateway|Gateway]]|[[Courage Spacecraft|Courage]]}}
  | launch_pad            = {{Unbulleted list|[[Tregueux International Space Center|Tregueux Space Center]]}}
  | launch_pad            = {{Unbulleted list|[[Tregueux International Space Center|Tregueux Space Center]]}}
  | reentry                =  
  | reentry                =  
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The '''Courage program''' is a internationally-funded human spaceflight program that has the goal of "landing man on [[Eirus]]", specifically at the south pole region by 2023. The program is carried out predominantly by the [[Zamastanian Space Agency|ZSA]], [[Zamastan]]ian commercial spaceflight companies contracted by ZSA, and international partners including the [[Avergnonian Space Program|ASP]] ([[Avergnon]]), [[Cadairian Space Research and Discovery Agency|CSRDA]] ([[Cadair]]), [[Ruskaynian Cosmic Initiative|RCI]] ([[Ruskayn]]), [[Cosmic Travel Administration|CTA]] ([[Durnstaal]]), [[Vulkarian Cosmic Administration|VCA]] ([[Vulkaria]]), [[Yuan Space Exploration Initiative|YSEI]] ([[Yuan]]), [[Drambenburg Zentrum fur Luft-und Raumfahrt|DLR]] ([[Drambenburg]]), and [[Beleroskov Exploration of Space Agency|BESA]] ([[Beleroskov]]). ZSA is leading the program, but expects international partnerships to play a key role in advancing Courage as the next step towards the long-term goal of establishing a sustainable presence on the Eirus, laying the foundation for private companies to build a planetary economy, and eventually sending humans to other possibly habitable planetary bodies.
The '''Courage program''' is a internationally-funded human spaceflight program that has the goal of "landing man on [[Eirus]]", specifically at the south pole region by 2023. The program is carried out predominantly by the [[Zamastanian Space Agency|ZSA]], [[Zamastan]]ian commercial spaceflight companies contracted by ZSA, and international partners including the [[Avergnonian Space Program|ASP]] ([[Avergnon]]), [[Cadairian Space Research and Discovery Agency|CSRDA]] ([[Cadair]]), [[Ruskaynian Cosmic Initiative|RCI]] ([[Ruskayn]]), [[Cosmic Travel Administration|CTA]] ([[Durnstaal]]), [[Vulkarian Cosmic Administration|VCA]] ([[Vulkaria]]), [[Yuan Space Exploration Initiative|YSEI]] ([[Yuan]]), [[Drambenburg Zentrum fur Luft-und Raumfahrt|DLR]] ([[Drambenburg]]), and [[Beleroskov Exploration of Space Agency|BESA]] ([[Beleroskov]]). ZSA is leading the program, but expects international partnerships to play a key role in advancing Courage as the next step towards the long-term goal of establishing a sustainable presence on the Eirus, laying the foundation for private companies to build a planetary economy, and eventually sending humans to other possibly habitable planetary bodies.


Since the early 2000s, ZSA had worked on numerous projects designed to test human limitations on the surface of other planets for possible habitation and colonization. The concept operates through three distinct phases leading up to fully sustained colonization. Zamastan has several robotic missions currently exploring Eirus, with a sample-return planned for the future. The Albatross Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle (MPCV) is intended to serve as the launch/splashdown crew delivery vehicle, with a Deep Space Habitat module providing additional living-space for the 16-month-long journey.  
Since the early 2000s, ZSA had worked on numerous projects designed to test human limitations on the surface of other planets for possible habitation and colonization. The concept operates through three distinct phases leading up to fully sustained colonization. Zamastan and other nations have several robotic missions currently exploring Eirus, with a sample-return planned for the future. The Albatross Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle (MPCV) is intended to serve as the launch/splashdown crew delivery vehicle, with a Deep Space Habitat module providing additional living-space for the 7-month-long journey.  


The first stage, already underway, is the "[[Iearth]] Reliant" phase. This phase continues using the [[Coalition Space Station]] until 2026; validating deep space technologies and studying the effects of long-duration space missions on the human body. The second stage, "Proving Ground," moves away from Iearth reliance and ventures into cislunar space for most of its tasks. The stage would test deep-space habitation facilities, and validate capabilities required for human exploration of Eirus. Finally, phase three is the transition to independence from Iearth resources. The "Iearth Independent" phase includes long term missions with surface habitats that only require routine maintenance, and the harvesting of Eirusian resources for fuel, water, and building materials.  
The first stage, already underway, is the "[[Iearth]] Reliant" phase. This phase continues using the [[Coalition Space Station]] until 2026; validating deep space technologies and studying the effects of long-duration space missions on the human body. The second stage, "Proving Ground," moves away from Iearth reliance and ventures into cislunar space for most of its tasks. The stage would test deep-space habitation facilities, and validate capabilities required for human exploration of Eirus. Finally, phase three is the transition to independence from Iearth resources. The "Iearth Independent" phase includes long term missions with surface habitats that only require routine maintenance, and the harvesting of Eirusian resources for fuel, water, and building materials.  
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===Planning===
===Planning===
===Test stage===
===Test stage===
The original ZSA OTP (Orbital Transport Program) contract called for the first demonstration flight of Blue Eagle in September 2010, and the completion of all three demonstration missions by September 2011. In February 2010, the plan for the first Blue Eagle OTP Demo flight was delayed by six months into the first quarter of 2011. According to Thibault Berger, the complexity of the development work and the regulatory requirements for launching from [[Tregueux International Space Center]] contributed to the delay. The first multi-engine test (with two engines connected to the first stage, firing simultaneously) was completed in January 2010, with successive tests leading to the full Blue Eagle complement of nine engines test-fired for a full mission length (178 seconds) of the first stage in November 2010. In October 2011, the first flight-ready first stage had a successful all-engine test fire at the ZSA's test stand in [[Alenchon]]. In November 2011, ZSA conducted the initial second stage test firing lasting forty seconds. This test succeeded without aborts or recycles. In January 2012, a full-duration (329 seconds) orbit-insertion firing of the Blue Eagle second stage was conducted at the Alenchon test site. The full stack arrived at the launch site for integration at the beginning of February 2012, and ZSA initially scheduled launch date of March 2012. However, they estimated anywhere between one and three months for integration and testing.
In February 2012, ZSA's first flight stack was set vertical at [[Tregueux International Space Center]] and on 9 July 2012, ZSA performed a static fire test, where the first stage was to be fired without taking off. Some fire and smoke were seen at the base of the rocket, leading to speculation of an engine fire. However, the fire and smoke were the results of normal burnoff from the liquid oxygen and fuel mix present in the system prior to launch, and no damage was sustained by the vehicle or the test pad. All vehicle systems leading up to the abort performed as expected, and no additional issues were noted that needed addressing. A subsequent test on 13 July 2012 was successful in firing the nine first-stage engines for 3.5 seconds.
The Blue Eagle rocket, used extensively across multiple agencies from 2012's successful testing and until the 2021 June liftoff for Courage, flew 126 times over 9 years, resulting in 124 full mission successes (98.41%), one partial success (delivered its cargo to the [[Coalition Space Station]] (CSS), but a secondary payload was stranded in a lower-than-planned orbit), and one failure (an unmanned Blue Eagle spacecraft was lost in flight). Additionally, one rocket and its payload were destroyed before launch in preparation for an on-pad static fire test. Of these flights, 50 were manned flights and all were successful.
====Launch Pads====
{{#invoke:Chart | bar chart
| float = center
| width = 420
| height = 320
| stack = 1
| group 1 = 2:0:2:2:6:7:7:1:12:8:14:13 <!-- SLC-40 -->
| group 2 = 0:0:0:0:0:0:0:12:3:3:11:7 <!-- LC-39A-->
| group 3 = 0:0:0:1:0:0:1: 5:6:2: 1:0 <!-- VABF -->
<!--| group 4 = 0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0:0 -->
| colors = Goldenrod : Chocolate : MediumPurple <!-- : SaddleBrown --> <!-- Don't change colours without consensus; colorblind accessibility needs to be checked -->
| group names = [[Tregueux International Space Center|TISC Complex 10]] : [[Tregueux International Space Center|TISC Complex 20]] : [[Tregueux International Space Center|TISC Complex 30]]
| x legends = '10:'11:'12:'13:'14:'15:'16:'17:'18:'19:'20:'21
}}
====Launch Outcomes====
{{#invoke:Chart | bar chart
| float = center
| width = 480
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| group 3 = 0:0:1:0:0:0:0: 0: 0: 0: 0: 0: 0
| group 4 = 2:0:1:3:6:6:8:18:21:11:12: 7: 0 <!-- Success commercial and government -->
| group 5 = 0:0:0:0:0:0:0: 0: 0: 2:14:13: 0 <!-- Success Starlink -->
| group 6 = 0:0:0:0:0:0:0: 0: 0: 0: 0:11:39 <!-- Planned commercial and government -->
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| x legends = '10:'11:'12:'13:'14:'15:'16:'17:'18:'19:'20:'21:'22
| y tick marks = 5
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===Manned mission===
===Manned mission===
====Courage 1====
====Spaceflight====
Although Eirus requires less energy per unit mass (delta V) to reach from [[Iearth]] than any planet except Venus. Using an eliptical orbit, a trip to Eirus requires approximately seven months in space. Modified transfer trajectories that cut the travel time down to four to five months in space are possible with incrementally higher amounts of energy and fuel compared to a transfer eliptical orbit, and are in standard use for robotic Eirus missions. Courage 1-5 all schedule under the realm of the seven month time frame for travel. Shortening the travel time below about six months requires higher delta-v and an increasing amount of fuel, and is difficult with chemical rockets. During the journey the astronauts would be subject to radiation, which requires a means to protect them. Cosmic radiation and solar wind cause DNA damage, which increases the risk of cancer significantly.
 
The [[Courage Spacecraft]] is composed of two primary habitable zones. Albatross Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle (MPCV) is intended to serve as the launch/splashdown crew delivery vehicle, with a Deep Space Habitat module providing additional living-space for the 7-month-long journey.
=====Courage 1=====
[[File:BlueEagleRocket-CourageProgramLaunchJune5-2021.jpg|thumb|right|The [[Courage program]]'s historic launch of the Courage 1 Blue Eagle rocket with 16 astronauts aboard in the first manned-interplanetary mission to [[Eirus]], June 5th, 2021]]
[[File:BlueEagleRocket-CourageProgramLaunchJune5-2021.jpg|thumb|right|The [[Courage program]]'s historic launch of the Courage 1 Blue Eagle rocket with 16 astronauts aboard in the first manned-interplanetary mission to [[Eirus]], June 5th, 2021]]
On June 5th, 2021, the Blue Eagle rocket launched from [[Tregueux International Space Center]] with 16 astronauts from six nations aboard for the first manned-interplanetary mission, traveling to [[Eirus]] in order to establish a colony. It is set to touchdown on January 13th, 2022. The flight is non-returnable, meaning the astronauts will be permanently remaining on Eirus establishing and monitoring the colony. The first steps of the mission upon arrival is to establish the colony site, known as '''Site A''', specifically to construct the basic utilities (oxygen, power, local communications, waste disposal, sanitation and water recycling), habitats, storage facilities, shop workspaces, the airlock, for pressurization and dust management, resource extraction equipment—initially for water and oxygen, later for a wider cross section of minerals. The mission will also bring building materials and equipment for energy production and energy storage, mostly in the form of solar farms. Components of a Eirus crewed-rover will also be brought to the site on the first mission, made with a joint [[Quetana]]n and [[Beatavic]] design.  
On June 5th, 2021, the Blue Eagle rocket launched from [[Tregueux International Space Center]] with 16 astronauts from six nations aboard for the first manned-interplanetary mission, traveling to [[Eirus]] in order to establish a colony. It is set to touchdown on January 13th, 2022. The flight is non-returnable, meaning the astronauts will be permanently remaining on Eirus establishing and monitoring the colony. The first steps of the mission upon arrival is to establish the colony site, known as '''Site A''', specifically to construct the basic utilities (oxygen, power, local communications, waste disposal, sanitation and water recycling), habitats, storage facilities, shop workspaces, the airlock, for pressurization and dust management, resource extraction equipment—initially for water and oxygen, later for a wider cross section of minerals. The mission will also bring building materials and equipment for energy production and energy storage, mostly in the form of solar farms. Components of a Eirus crewed-rover will also be brought to the site on the first mission, made with a joint [[Quetana]]n and [[Beatavic]] design.  


====Courage 2====
=====Courage 2=====
Courage 2, the second manned flight in the courage program, is slated to launch on February 3rd, 2022. It is set to touchdown on September 18th, 2022. Upon arrival to Eirus but prior to touchdown, this crew will dispatch multiple orbital satellites to further integrate communications and efficiency with equipment on Eirus and Iearth respectively. The mission will also bring equipment for food production spaces and propellant production equipment in hydrogen and methane through the {{wp|Sabatier reaction}} for fuel—with oxygen oxidizer—for chemical rocket engines. The last components of the rover will be delivered upon this arrival as well.  
Courage 2, the second manned flight in the courage program, is slated to launch on February 3rd, 2022. It is set to touchdown on September 18th, 2022. Upon arrival to Eirus but prior to touchdown, this crew will dispatch multiple orbital satellites to further integrate communications and efficiency with equipment on Eirus and Iearth respectively. The mission will also bring equipment for food production spaces and propellant production equipment in hydrogen and methane through the {{wp|Sabatier reaction}} for fuel—with oxygen oxidizer—for chemical rocket engines. The last components of the rover will be delivered upon this arrival as well.  


====Courage 3====
=====Courage 3=====
Courage 3, the second manned flight in the courage program, is slated to launch on June 11th, 2022 and arrive on January 12th, 2023. Fuels or other energy source for use with surface transportation will be transported alongside this mission, with carbon monoxide/oxygen (CO/O2) engines suggested for early surface transportation use as both carbon monoxide and oxygen can be straightforwardly produced by zirconium dioxide electrolysis from the Eirus atmosphere without requiring use of any of the water resources to obtain hydrogen. The first components of a nuclear-energy production reactor will also be delivered in this stage, to be completed upon the arrival of Courage 5 in 2024.
Courage 3, the second manned flight in the courage program, is slated to launch on June 11th, 2022 and arrive on January 12th, 2023. Fuels or other energy source for use with surface transportation will be transported alongside this mission, with carbon monoxide/oxygen (CO/O2) engines suggested for early surface transportation use as both carbon monoxide and oxygen can be straightforwardly produced by zirconium dioxide electrolysis from the Eirus atmosphere without requiring use of any of the water resources to obtain hydrogen. The first components of a nuclear-energy production reactor will also be delivered in this stage, to be completed upon the arrival of Courage 5 in 2024.


Line 108: Line 151:
* (Yuan)
* (Yuan)
* ([[Drambenburg]])
* ([[Drambenburg]])
* ([[Quetana]])
* Danilo Aguiar ([[Quetana]])
* (Quetana)
* Bia Abril (Quetana)
* ([[Elbresia]])
* ([[Elbresia]])
* ([[Beatavic]])
* Halle Fisher ([[Beatavic]])
* ([[Emmiria]])
* Aiman Ameen ([[Emmiria]])
* ([[Timeria]])
* ([[Timeria]])
* ([[Besmenia]])
* ([[Besmenia]])
* ([[Kossmil]])
* ([[Kossmil]])
* ([[Estoca]])
* ([[Estoca]])
* ([[Zitasso]])
* Gino Padovesi ([[Zitasso]])
* ([[Constantio]])
* ([[Constantio]])
* ([[Utobania]])
* ([[Utobania]])

Revision as of 04:27, 24 August 2021

Courage program
BlueEagleRocket-CourageProgramLaunchJune5-2021.jpg
The Courage program's historic launch of the Blue Eagle rocket with 16 astronauts aboard in the first manned-interplanetary mission to Eirus, June 5th, 2021
Station statistics
COSPAR IDTemplate:COSPAR
SATCAT no.Template:Wd
Launch
Carrier rocket
Launch pad

The Courage program is a internationally-funded human spaceflight program that has the goal of "landing man on Eirus", specifically at the south pole region by 2023. The program is carried out predominantly by the ZSA, Zamastanian commercial spaceflight companies contracted by ZSA, and international partners including the ASP (Avergnon), CSRDA (Cadair), RCI (Ruskayn), CTA (Durnstaal), VCA (Vulkaria), YSEI (Yuan), DLR (Drambenburg), and BESA (Beleroskov). ZSA is leading the program, but expects international partnerships to play a key role in advancing Courage as the next step towards the long-term goal of establishing a sustainable presence on the Eirus, laying the foundation for private companies to build a planetary economy, and eventually sending humans to other possibly habitable planetary bodies.

Since the early 2000s, ZSA had worked on numerous projects designed to test human limitations on the surface of other planets for possible habitation and colonization. The concept operates through three distinct phases leading up to fully sustained colonization. Zamastan and other nations have several robotic missions currently exploring Eirus, with a sample-return planned for the future. The Albatross Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle (MPCV) is intended to serve as the launch/splashdown crew delivery vehicle, with a Deep Space Habitat module providing additional living-space for the 7-month-long journey.

The first stage, already underway, is the "Iearth Reliant" phase. This phase continues using the Coalition Space Station until 2026; validating deep space technologies and studying the effects of long-duration space missions on the human body. The second stage, "Proving Ground," moves away from Iearth reliance and ventures into cislunar space for most of its tasks. The stage would test deep-space habitation facilities, and validate capabilities required for human exploration of Eirus. Finally, phase three is the transition to independence from Iearth resources. The "Iearth Independent" phase includes long term missions with surface habitats that only require routine maintenance, and the harvesting of Eirusian resources for fuel, water, and building materials.

On December 27th, 2020, ZSA Director Thibault Berger and Secretary of Space Science, Development, and Exploration Piyush Goyal announced that the Zamastanian Space Agency would be leading an internationally organized manned-mission to Eirus, the fourth planet in the Estrella System, in the goal of setting up a long term habitation and colonization program on its surface. The mission, named the Courage program, and with the first launch consistent of 16 astronauts (6 Zamastanian, the remaining 10 from Durnstaal, Vitosium, Caspia, Yuan, and Avergnon), launched on June 5th, 2021, and will arrive at Eirus in January 2022. The second flight is expected to launch on February 3rd, 2022.

History

Planning

Test stage

The original ZSA OTP (Orbital Transport Program) contract called for the first demonstration flight of Blue Eagle in September 2010, and the completion of all three demonstration missions by September 2011. In February 2010, the plan for the first Blue Eagle OTP Demo flight was delayed by six months into the first quarter of 2011. According to Thibault Berger, the complexity of the development work and the regulatory requirements for launching from Tregueux International Space Center contributed to the delay. The first multi-engine test (with two engines connected to the first stage, firing simultaneously) was completed in January 2010, with successive tests leading to the full Blue Eagle complement of nine engines test-fired for a full mission length (178 seconds) of the first stage in November 2010. In October 2011, the first flight-ready first stage had a successful all-engine test fire at the ZSA's test stand in Alenchon. In November 2011, ZSA conducted the initial second stage test firing lasting forty seconds. This test succeeded without aborts or recycles. In January 2012, a full-duration (329 seconds) orbit-insertion firing of the Blue Eagle second stage was conducted at the Alenchon test site. The full stack arrived at the launch site for integration at the beginning of February 2012, and ZSA initially scheduled launch date of March 2012. However, they estimated anywhere between one and three months for integration and testing.

In February 2012, ZSA's first flight stack was set vertical at Tregueux International Space Center and on 9 July 2012, ZSA performed a static fire test, where the first stage was to be fired without taking off. Some fire and smoke were seen at the base of the rocket, leading to speculation of an engine fire. However, the fire and smoke were the results of normal burnoff from the liquid oxygen and fuel mix present in the system prior to launch, and no damage was sustained by the vehicle or the test pad. All vehicle systems leading up to the abort performed as expected, and no additional issues were noted that needed addressing. A subsequent test on 13 July 2012 was successful in firing the nine first-stage engines for 3.5 seconds.

The Blue Eagle rocket, used extensively across multiple agencies from 2012's successful testing and until the 2021 June liftoff for Courage, flew 126 times over 9 years, resulting in 124 full mission successes (98.41%), one partial success (delivered its cargo to the Coalition Space Station (CSS), but a secondary payload was stranded in a lower-than-planned orbit), and one failure (an unmanned Blue Eagle spacecraft was lost in flight). Additionally, one rocket and its payload were destroyed before launch in preparation for an on-pad static fire test. Of these flights, 50 were manned flights and all were successful.

Launch Pads

5
10
15
20
25
30
'10
'11
'12
'13
'14
'15
'16
'17
'18
'19
'20
'21

Launch Outcomes

8
16
24
32
40
'10
'11
'12
'13
'14
'15
'16
'17
'18
'19
'20
'21
'22
  •   Loss before launch
  •   Loss during flight
  •   Partial failure
  •   Success (commercial and government)
  •   Success (CSS)
  •   Planned (commercial and government)
  •   Planned (CSS)

Manned mission

Spaceflight

Although Eirus requires less energy per unit mass (delta V) to reach from Iearth than any planet except Venus. Using an eliptical orbit, a trip to Eirus requires approximately seven months in space. Modified transfer trajectories that cut the travel time down to four to five months in space are possible with incrementally higher amounts of energy and fuel compared to a transfer eliptical orbit, and are in standard use for robotic Eirus missions. Courage 1-5 all schedule under the realm of the seven month time frame for travel. Shortening the travel time below about six months requires higher delta-v and an increasing amount of fuel, and is difficult with chemical rockets. During the journey the astronauts would be subject to radiation, which requires a means to protect them. Cosmic radiation and solar wind cause DNA damage, which increases the risk of cancer significantly.

The Courage Spacecraft is composed of two primary habitable zones. Albatross Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle (MPCV) is intended to serve as the launch/splashdown crew delivery vehicle, with a Deep Space Habitat module providing additional living-space for the 7-month-long journey.

Courage 1
The Courage program's historic launch of the Courage 1 Blue Eagle rocket with 16 astronauts aboard in the first manned-interplanetary mission to Eirus, June 5th, 2021

On June 5th, 2021, the Blue Eagle rocket launched from Tregueux International Space Center with 16 astronauts from six nations aboard for the first manned-interplanetary mission, traveling to Eirus in order to establish a colony. It is set to touchdown on January 13th, 2022. The flight is non-returnable, meaning the astronauts will be permanently remaining on Eirus establishing and monitoring the colony. The first steps of the mission upon arrival is to establish the colony site, known as Site A, specifically to construct the basic utilities (oxygen, power, local communications, waste disposal, sanitation and water recycling), habitats, storage facilities, shop workspaces, the airlock, for pressurization and dust management, resource extraction equipment—initially for water and oxygen, later for a wider cross section of minerals. The mission will also bring building materials and equipment for energy production and energy storage, mostly in the form of solar farms. Components of a Eirus crewed-rover will also be brought to the site on the first mission, made with a joint Quetanan and Beatavic design.

Courage 2

Courage 2, the second manned flight in the courage program, is slated to launch on February 3rd, 2022. It is set to touchdown on September 18th, 2022. Upon arrival to Eirus but prior to touchdown, this crew will dispatch multiple orbital satellites to further integrate communications and efficiency with equipment on Eirus and Iearth respectively. The mission will also bring equipment for food production spaces and propellant production equipment in hydrogen and methane through the Sabatier reaction for fuel—with oxygen oxidizer—for chemical rocket engines. The last components of the rover will be delivered upon this arrival as well.

Courage 3

Courage 3, the second manned flight in the courage program, is slated to launch on June 11th, 2022 and arrive on January 12th, 2023. Fuels or other energy source for use with surface transportation will be transported alongside this mission, with carbon monoxide/oxygen (CO/O2) engines suggested for early surface transportation use as both carbon monoxide and oxygen can be straightforwardly produced by zirconium dioxide electrolysis from the Eirus atmosphere without requiring use of any of the water resources to obtain hydrogen. The first components of a nuclear-energy production reactor will also be delivered in this stage, to be completed upon the arrival of Courage 5 in 2024.

Supporting Programs

Launch Vehicles

Spacecraft

Landers

Astronauts

Courage 1

The astronauts who are slated for the mission are as follows:

Courage 2

The astronauts who are slated for the mission are as follows:

Courage 3

The astronauts who are slated for the mission are as follows: