Artemis
1 moon rocket arrives at pad for Nov. 14 launch
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published
The huge Artemis 1 stack is on the pad for integration ahead of its launch to the moon in as soon as 10 days.
PLANASA's massive moon mission is back at the pad for its departure from Earth.
The Space Launch System (SLS)
rocket topped with an Orion spacecraft rolled
out from the Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) at NASA's Kennedy Space Center
(KSC) in Florida a little before midnight EDT (0400 GMT) on Friday (Nov. 4).
The slow-motion crawl to Launch Pad 39B concluded at 8:30 a.m. EDT (1230 GMT) and the stack is being integrated on to the pad, NASA officials tweeted Friday after the arrival.
"If we weren't confident, we wouldn't roll out.
If we weren't confident, we wouldn't start the countdown when we do so. We're
confident moving forward," said Jim Free, associate administrator of the
Exploration Systems Development Mission Directorate at NASA headquarters in
Washington, D.C, at the press conference.
Artemis
1 has now concluded its fourth journey to the pad, after having made excursions
in March and June for prelaunch fueling tests and a third one in mid-August to
try to head to space. Various issues with past launches prevented it from
making it to the moon, and the stack last returned to the VAB in late September
to shelter from Hurricane
Ian and for minor maintenance, repairs and tests.
Artemis
1 is the first mission in NASA's Artemis program,
which plans to put humans permanently and sustainably on the moon by
the late 2020s.
The
mission will be the first flight for the SLS and the second for Orion, with
Artemis 1 putting an uncrewed spacecraft around the moon and back. If all goes
well, Artemis 2 will
launch astronauts around the moon in 2024 or so, and Artemis 3 will
send astronauts to the surface for a landing mission after another year or two.
Elizabeth Howell is the co-author of "Why Am
I Taller?" (ECW Press,
2022; with Canadian astronaut Dave Williams), a book about space medicine.
Follow her on Twitter @howellspace. Follow us on Twitter @Spacedotcom or Facebook.
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