Nasa to roll out giant US moon rocket for debut launch
NASA’S gigantic Space Launch System moon rocket, topped with an uncrewed astronaut capsule, is set to begin an hours-long crawl to its launchpad Tuesday (Aug 16) night ahead of the behemoth’s debut test flight later this month.
The 98-metre-tall rocket is scheduled to embark on its first mission to space - without any humans - on Aug 29. It will be a crucial, long-delayed demonstration trip to the moon in Nasa’s Artemis programme, the United States’ multibillion-dollar effort to return humans to the lunar surface as practice for future missions to Mars.
The Space Launch System, whose development in the past decade has been led by Boeing, is scheduled to emerge from its assembly building at Nasa’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida around 9.00 pm EDT on Tuesday (1.00 am GMT on Wednesday) and begin the 6km trek to its launchpad. Moving less than1.6 km per hour, the rollout take roughly 11 hours.
Sitting atop the rocket is Nasa’s Orion astronaut capsule, a pod built by Lockheed Martin. It is designed to separate from the rocket in space, ferry humans towards the moon’s vicinity and rendezvous with a separate spacecraft that will take astronauts down to the lunar surface.
But for the Aug 29 mission, called Artemis 1, the Orion capsule will launch atop the Space Launch System without any humans and orbit around the moon before returning to Earth for an ocean splashdown 42 days later.
If bad launch weather or a minor technical issue triggers a delay from Aug 29, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration has backup launch dates on Sep 2 and Sep 5. REUTERS
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