17.03.2022
Quelle: NASA
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Update: 18.03.2022
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Watch NASA's Artemis I moon rocket make first appearance in Florida
Update: NASA's Space Launch System rocket slated to launch the agency's Artemis I mission to the moon rolled out of the Vehicle Assembly Building on Thursday, making its first public appearance as a stacked vehicle. The rocket will spend several weeks at pad 39B running through tests and, eventually, a fueling rehearsal before heading back to the VAB next month.
Follow live video and real-time updates as NASA rolls its Space Launch System moon rocket out of the iconic Vehicle Assembly Building at Kennedy Space Center in Florida for its first public appearance on Thursday, March 17.
The stacked rocket, which stands 322 feet tall and will launch the uncrewed Artemis I mission to the moon no earlier than June, will begin its slow trek out of the VAB at 5 p.m. ET. It will take roughly 11 hours for NASA's Crawler-Transporter 2 to reach pad 39B with the rocket and its mobile launch tower.
Update: NASA's Space Launch System rocket slated to launch the agency's Artemis I mission to the moon rolled out of the Vehicle Assembly Building on Thursday, making its first public appearance as a stacked vehicle. The rocket will spend several weeks at pad 39B running through tests and, eventually, a fueling rehearsal before heading back to the VAB next month.
Follow live video and real-time updates as NASA rolls its Space Launch System moon rocket out of the iconic Vehicle Assembly Building at Kennedy Space Center in Florida for its first public appearance on Thursday, March 17.
The stacked rocket, which stands 322 feet tall and will launch the uncrewed Artemis I mission to the moon no earlier than June, will begin its slow trek out of the VAB at 5 p.m. ET. It will take roughly 11 hours for NASA's Crawler-Transporter 2 to reach pad 39B with the rocket and its mobile launch tower.
Quelle: Florida Today
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Nasa's giant new SLS Moon rocket makes its debut
The American space agency has rolled out its new giant Moon rocket for the first time.
The vehicle, known as the Space Launch System (SLS), was taken to Pad 39B at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida to conduct a dummy countdown.
If that goes well, the rocket will be declared ready for a mission in which it will send an uncrewed test capsule around the Moon.
This could happen in the next couple of months.
Ultimately, it's hoped astronauts would climb aboard later SLS rockets to return to the Moon's surface sometime in the second half of this decade.
These missions are part of what Nasa calls its Artemis programme.
Watching the roll-out, agency administrator Bill Nelson said we were entering a golden era of human space exploration.
"The Artemis generation is preparing to reach new frontiers," he told the spectator crowds gathered at Kennedy.
"This generation will return astronauts to the Moon and this time, we will land the first woman and the first person of colour on the surface, to conduct ground-breaking science.
"Nasa's Artemis programme will pave the way for humanity's giant leap (to) future missions to Mars."
Quelle: BBC