A significant element of a rocket to ship astronauts to the moon has arrived in Florida.
The higher stage of NASA’s Area Launch System (SLS) rocket scheduled to launch the Artemis 3 mission arrived at Cape Canaveral Area Power Station’s Poseidon Wharf in Florida on Aug. 9, in accordance with a NASA statement.
The SLS higher stage, referred to as the interim cryogenic propulsion stage (ICPS), will present the additional kick wanted to ship astronauts to our nearest neighbor, the moon. The ICPS and its sole RL10 engine will burn cryogenic liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen to ship the crew contained in the Artemis 3 Orion spacecraft from low Earth orbit right into a exact trajectory in direction of the moon.
The Artemis 3 ICPS would be the final of its type. Artemis missions 4 and on are to make use of the SLS Block 1B configuration which makes use of the extra highly effective Exploration Higher Stage (EUS).
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The ICPS was manufactured by United Launch Alliance (ULA) and departed amenities at Decatur, Alabama on Aug. 1. The ICPS was shipped by ULA’s RocketShip cargo vessel, touring down the Mississippi River, alongside the Gulf Coast and on in direction of Florida.
Try ULA images from the arrival of #ICPS-3, the upperstage that can propel #Artemis III astronauts to the Moon! 🌕📷: pic.twitter.com/Qq1YivXbhnAugust 17, 2023
Contractors Boeing and ULA conduct last checkouts on the ICPS earlier than it’s delivered to NASA’s close by Kennedy Area Heart.
Artemis 3 is scheduled to launch in 2025 for now, after an preliminary goal of 2024. Nonetheless, NASA lately expressed issues concerning the progress of the mission’s human touchdown system — SpaceX’s Starship — and acknowledged that the mission might slip into 2026.