Premier Giorgia Meloni on Wednesday
received astronaut Luca Parmitano at her office at Palazzo Chigi
and gave him the official Tricolour flag of the Italian State to
take with him on the Artemis III mission.
Last month NASA announced that Italian Air Force colonel
Parmitano would be the pilot of the mission, which is scheduled
for the second half of 2027 with the aim of paving the way for
humanity's return to the Moon.
A statement said Meloni congratulated Parmitano on landing an
assignment "which brings honour to the entire nation and
confirms, once again, Italy's excellence in the space sector".
It said she gave Parmitano the flag as a "symbol of Italian
ingenuity, identity, and pride".
"We are very proud and very curious," Meloni said as she gave
him the flag.
"Not many deserve it like you".
Parmitano, who was accompanied by his wife, revealed some
details about the mission before receiving the flag.
"It is a one-of-a-kind mission; it echoes what happened with
Apollo 9—though that was the ninth mission," he said.
"For us, it is the third—the second with a crew—and the very
first where we will test the systems essential for the Moon.
"It is a mission dedicated entirely to experimentation and
testing....
"We will perform rendezvous manoeuvres—orbital manoeuvres,
including manual ones—where we will pilot the spacecraft close
to the lander, dock with it, and allow the astronauts to
transfer from one spacecraft to the other; afterwards, we will
undock, fly around the lander to verify that everything went
smoothly, and then move away.
"The first lander will burn up in the atmosphere; another one
will launch, and we will repeat the same manoeuvres but using
different procedures—since the two landers are very different.
"It is an extremely complex mission, because while the first
one—Artemis II, which recently landed and was highly
successful—involved just one spacecraft and a relatively simple
mission profile, we have three spacecraft, three control
centres, and three ground crews that must all work together in a
coordinated way to ensure the success of our manoeuvrers and our
mission.
"From Monday I'll problem be strapped tight into the spacecraft
seat, learning everything down to the last bolt."
The 49-year-old from Paterno in Sicily was selected as an ESA
astronaut in May 2009.
He has had two stints in space and during the second, in 2019,
he became the first Italian to command the International Space
Station.
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © Copyright ANSA

