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This week @NASA: Historic event for human spaceflight, new launch date of Artemis I

NASA Historic Event for Human Spaceflight
Written by adrina

Commemorating a historic event for human spaceflight…

“We decide to go to the moon…”

An update on the plans for Artemis I…

And what NASA’s Perseverance rover is up to

Mars
Mars is the second smallest planet in our solar system and the fourth planet from the sun. It’s a dusty, cold desert world with a very thin atmosphere. Iron oxide is widespread on the surface of Mars, leading to its reddish color and nickname "The Red Planet." The name Mars comes from the Roman god of war.

” data-gt-translate-attributes=”[{” attribute=””>Mars … a few of the stories to tell you about – This Week at

The 60th anniversary of JFK’s speech at Rice University

On September 12, NASA and Rice University commemorated the 60th anniversary of John F. Kennedy’s historic 1962 speech in Rice. In that speech, the President recommitted the nation to the goal he proposed to Congress in May 1961 had to land astronauts on the moon before the end of the decade and bring them back safely to earth. As NASA Administrator Bill Nelson emphasized during the keynote address at the event, the President’s speech helped expand our leadership in human spaceflight then and continues to inspire us today as we work to bring humans back to the moon and eventually to be sent to Mars as part of NASA’s Artemis program.

“Sixty years ago, President Kennedy put us in the sails on the new sea of ​​space exploration, and that mission never ends. It is a mission about science and the advancement of the human spirit to expand what is possible.”Bill Nelson, NASA Administrator

Space Launch System (SLS) rocket launch

This artist’s rendering shows an aerial view of the launch of NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS) rocket. This Block 1 crew configuration of the rocket will send the first three Artemis missions to the moon. Photo credit: NASA/MSFC

New target dates for the Artemis I critical test and launch

A cryogenic demonstration test for our Artemis I unmanned flight test is now scheduled for no earlier than Wednesday September 21st. Meanwhile, the agency has applied for a September 27 launch opportunity for the space launch system

SLS
NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS) will be the most powerful rocket they have ever built. As part of NASA’s space exploration plans, it will send astronauts on missions to an asteroid and eventually to Mars. As the SLS evolves, the launcher will be upgraded with more powerful versions. Eventually, the SLS will have a lifting capacity of 130 tons, opening up new possibilities for missions to places like Saturn and Jupiter.

” data-gt-translate-attributes=”[{” attribute=””>SLS rocket and Orion spacecraft, with a potential backup opportunity of October 2 under review. During the cryogenic demonstration, teams will load super cold liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen into the core stage and interim cryogenic propulsion stage of the SLS to confirm that a hydrogen leak has been fixed. Artemis I is the first integrated flight test with the SLS and Orion. The mission will send Orion beyond the Moon and return the spacecraft back to Earth.

Perseverance Workspace at Skinner Ridge

NASA’s Perseverance rover puts its robotic arm to work around a rocky outcrop called “Skinner Ridge” in Mars’ Jezero Crater. Composed of multiple images, this mosaic shows layered sedimentary rocks in the face of a cliff in the delta, as well as one of the locations where the rover abraded a circular patch to analyze a rock’s composition. Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech/MSSS

Perseverance Rover Investigates Geologically Rich Mars Terrain

NASA’s Perseverance rover is collecting samples and analyzing the composition of rocks at an ancient river delta located in the Red Planet’s Jezero Crater, an area long considered by scientists to be a top prospect for finding signs of possible ancient microscopic life. In its analysis of a sample from a rock named Wildcat Ridge, the rover’s SHERLOC instrument registered the most abundant organic detections on the mission to date. Further conclusions about what is contained in this sample will have to wait until it’s returned to Earth for in-depth study as part of the Mars Sample Return campaign, an international collaboration led by NASA and the European Space Agency.

Thomas Zurbuchen

Dr. Thomas Zurbuchen, the associate administrator for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate. Credit: NASA

NASA Announces Pending Departure of Science Associate Administrator

Dr. Thomas Zurbuchen, the associate administrator for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate, is planning to leave the agency at the end of 2022. His six years at NASA have included some of the agency’s most inspirational moments, from sending the first spacecraft to touch the Sun, to launching and sharing the first images from the

NASA’s X 59 QueSST

This artist’s concept of NASA’s QueSST jet reflects the airplane’s final configuration following years of research and design engineering. Credit: Lockheed Martin

Ground Recording Stations Tested for Future Quiet Supersonic Flight

The team at NASA’s Armstrong Flight Research Center recently completed a flight series called CarpetDIEM which tested state-of-the-art ground recording stations designed to hear and record the unique sounds that will be generated during future supersonic flights by NASA’s X-59 aircraft. The X-59’s goal is to reduce the intensity of sonic booms, which are heard when an aircraft flies faster than the speed of sound, to a quiet sonic “thump.” When the X-59 flies, NASA will record the sonic thumps as part of the effort to validate its quiet supersonic design.

That’s what’s up this week @NASA …


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