Science

NASA Starts Up Gateway’s Power System for First Time

1 min readPreparations for Next Moonwalk Simulations Underway (and Underwater)

The primary structure of Gateway’s Power and Propulsion Element (PPE) undergoing assembly, integration, and testing at Lanteris Space Systems in Palo Alto, California, on September 29, 2025. Lanteris Space Systems

Development continues on NASA’s Power and Propulsion Element, a solar electric propulsion spacecraft designed to provide power for Gateway in lunar orbit.

Able to generate 60 kilowatts of power, the element was successfully powered on earlier last year. The milestone demonstrates the element can provide the spacecraft with power, high-rate communications, attitude control, as well as the ability to maintain and maneuver between orbits.

The Power and Propulsion Element is managed by NASA’s Glenn Research Center in Cleveland and built by industry partner Lanteris Space Systems in Palo Alto, California, where teams have secured the element’s main electrical system inside protective exterior panels. On deck for installation at Lanteris Space Systems are three 12-kilowatt advanced electric propulsion system thrusters, manufactured by L3Harris, and four 6-kilowatt Busek-built BHT-6000 thrusters. The roll-out solar arrays for Gateway are complete and moving through testing at Redwire’s facility in Goleta, California.

For more information about NASA’s lunar exploration missions, visit:

https://www.nasa.gov/artemis

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Last Updated

Jan 08, 2026

ContactJacqueline Minerdjacqueline.minerd@nasa.govLocationGlenn Research Center

Related TermsGlenn Research CenterArtemisGateway ProgramGateway Space StationJohnson Space Center

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