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NASA rocket launch advances Moon mission dream

By: arboofti send a private message
Lahore : Pakistan | 22 days ago  
Views: 36

Friday, October 30, 2009

CAPE CANAVERAL: Nasa successfully launched on Wednesday the prototype for a new generation of space rocket, advancing its plans to return man to the Moon by 2020.

The Ares I-X, the tallest rocket in the world, blasted off at 11:30 am from Cape Canaveral in Florida, carrying with it the US space agency’s lofty ambitions for human space flight.

The rocket is the prototype of the Ares I, designed to carry a new capsule-shaped crew module called the Orion into low Earth orbit for missions to the International Space Station, the Moon, and beyond.

“I can’t say enough about this team,” said Doug Cooke, associate administrator for the Exploration Systems Mission Directorate at Nasa headquarters in Washington.

“They’ve been together probably a little over three years now, and they went from a concept to flying this vehicle in that period of time, which is the first time this has been done by a human spaceflight team in a long time.”

After a frustrating Tuesday, when several attempts to launch were abandoned, the clouds finally parted long enough for the syringe-like rocket to shoot up into the blue sky above the Kennedy Space Centre. The booster section of the 327-foot rocket separated from a simulated upper stage after two and a half minutes before dropping to Earth and splashing down in the Atlantic awaiting retrieval.

“It’s the most beautiful rocket launch I have ever seen,” said programme director Jeff Hanley when the applause had died down in the Nasa control room. “I get tears in my eyes. It was very special.”

More than 700 sensors should provide engineers with important data for fine-tuning the design of the rocket that with Orion is intended to replace Nasa’s aging fleet of space shuttles, which is due to be retired in 2010.

“The vehicle flew well and we are going to get a lot of data back and we are going to learn a lot that will stand us in good stead for the future,” Cooke told a press conference.

Nasa said the data gathered from the 445-million-dollar launch — the first time in 30 years that a space craft other than a shuttle has blasted off from the Kennedy Space Centre — would take several months to analyse.

Ares and Orion are part of Constellation, Nasa’s grand programme to send astronauts back to the Moon by 2020, and then perhaps to Mars and other destinations in the solar system.

Although the shuttle is to be retired next year, the Ares I will not enter into service until 2015 at the earliest. In the interim, Nasa will have to rely on Russia to put US astronauts into space, at a hefty price, too.

The Orion is initially being designed to take a crew of up to six astronauts on flights to the International Space Station, or four on lunar missions of up to 210 days. Instead of landing like a plane as the shuttle does, it will float back to Earth using parachutes, more like the Apollo module that took Neil Armstrong, Michael Collins and Buzz Aldrin to the Moon more than 40 years ago.

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News Stories
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  • News Source: Fox News | 22 days ago
    Wednesday's Ares I-X rocket test flight, causing damage to the spent booster when it splashed into the Atlantic Ocean harder than planned. ," said Ares I-X mission manager Bob Ess on Friday. "Afterward, when we saw the parachutes we assumed,...
  • News Source: Star Tribune | 22 days ago
    The problem caused the Ares I-X booster to slam into the Atlantic Ocean harder than expected...Mission manager Bob Ess said Friday the damage is irrelevant because the booster is not meant to fly again. He says the parachute trouble does not detract...
  • News Source: Christian Science Monitor | 22 days ago
    Ares 1-X rocket — it’s first stage, to be precise — was badly damaged as it hit the ocean following Wednesday’s test launch . According to a post on Florida Today ’s website, the solid-fuel motor’s casing bent on impact after two of its...
Blogs
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  • Blog Source: astronomyandspace.blogspot.com
    The Ares I vehicle will launch the Orion spacecraft and the astronauts on board for future human spaceflight missions, which may even include missions to the Moon and Mars. The trial performed by the Ares I-X rocket allowed NASA to test ...
  • Blog Source: spacefellowship.com
    NASA's Ares I-X test rocket lifted off at 11:30 a.m. EDT Wednesday from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida for a two-minute powered flight. The test flight lasted about six minutes from its launch from the newly-modified Launch ...
  • Blog Source: www.twirlit.com
    The launch of NASA's Ares 1-X rocket at Cape Canaveral has been delayed by 24 hours. Why? And will it ever make it into the air before the government shuts it down?
  • Blog Source: www.popsci.com
    Ares I-X roared off its launch pad at 11:30 EST at Cape Canaveral. This marks success for NASA's second launch attempt to get the Ares I-X rocket off the ground after weather delayed the launch on Tuesday. ...
  • Blog Source: www.universetoday.com
    The space shuttle and Ares I-X. Credit: NASA/Scott Andrews. KSC is a busy spaceport, with the Ares I-X launching and space shuttle Atlantis poised on Launch Pad 39A for liftoff, targeted for Nov. 16. The Ares 1-X is nearly 143 feet taller than the
  • Blog Source: features.csmonitor.com
    NASA spent two days trying to launch the 327-foot Ares 1-X, the experimental rocket that has a smaller motor than the Ares 1 and also a mock second stage. But the delays were weather-related, rather than the result of technical problems ...
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Posted By arboofti arboofti | 22 days ago
I can’t say enough about this team,” said Doug Cooke, associate administrator for the Exploration Systems Mission Directorate at Nasa headquarters in Washington.
Posted By arboofti arboofti | 22 days ago
I can’t say enough about this team,” said Doug Cooke, associate administrator for the Exploration Systems Mission Directorate at Nasa headquarters in Washington.
Posted By jojoeffe jojoeffe | 21 days ago
So they have a dream that human can live outside the earth? Let's see...
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