The ESAS recommended strategies for flying the crewed CEV by 2014, and endorsed a
Lunar Orbit Rendezvous approach to the Moon. The LEO versions of the CEV would carry crews four to six to the ISS. The lunar version of the CEV would carry a crew of four and the Mars CEV would carry six. Cargo could also be carried aboard an uncrewed version CEV, similar to the Russian
Progress cargo ships.
Lockheed Martin was selected as the contractor for the CEV by NASA. This vehicle would ultimately become the
Orion MPCV with its first flight in 2014 (
EFT-1), its first crewed flight in 2022 (
Artemis 2), and first lunar landing flight in 2028 (
Artemis 4). Only one version of the vehicle was constructed to support deep space missions with ISS crew transfers being handled by the
Commercial Crew Program. The CEV re-entry module would weigh about 12 tons—almost twice the mass of the Apollo Command Module—and, like Apollo, would be attached to a service module for life support and propulsion (
European Service Module). The CEV would be an Apollo-like capsule, with a
Viking-type
heat shield, not a
lifting body or
winged vehicle like the Shuttle was. It would touch down on land rather than water, similar to the
Russian
Soyuz spacecraft. This would be changed to splashdown only to save weight, the
CST-100 Starliner would be the first US spacecraft to touchdown on land. Possible landing areas that had been identified included
Edwards Air Force Base, California, Carson Flats (
Carson Sink{{cite web|title=Surface Landing Site Weather Analysis for NASA's Constellation Program|url=https://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/20080013577_2008013473.pdf Accelerated lunar mission development was slated to start by 2010, once the Shuttle retired. The Lunar Surface Access Module, which would later be known as
Altair, and heavy-lift booster (
Ares V) would be developed in parallel and would both be ready for flight by 2018. The eventual goal was to achieve a lunar landing by 2020, the
Artemis Program is now targeting a lunar landing in 2028. The LSAM would be much larger than the
Apollo Lunar Module and would be capable of carrying up to 23 tons of cargo to the lunar surface to support a lunar outpost. Like the Apollo LM, the LSAM would include a descent stage for landing and an ascent stage for returning to orbit. The crew of four would ride in the ascent stage. The ascent stage would be powered by a
methane/
oxygen fuel for return to lunar orbit (later changed to liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen, due to the infancy of oxygen/methane rocket propulsion). This would allow a derivative of the same lander to be used on later Mars missions, where methane propellant can be manufactured from the Martian soil in a process known as
In-Situ Resource Utilization (ISRU). The LSAM would support the crew of four on the lunar surface for about a week and use advanced roving vehicles to explore the lunar surface. The huge amount of cargo carried by the LSAM would be extremely beneficial for supporting a lunar base and for bringing large amounts of scientific equipment to the lunar surface. Artemis will use separately launched landers under the
CLPS Program to deliver support equipment for lunar outposts. ==Lunar mission profile==