The
322-foot-tall (98-meter) 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
for NASA's Artemis program, 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 during the past
decade has been led by Boeing Co, emerged from its assembly
building at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida about 10 p.m.
EDT (0200 GMT) on Tuesday and began a four-mile (6-kilometer)
trek to its launchpad.
Moving less than 1mph (1.6kph), the rollout will take roughly 11
hours.
Sitting atop the rocket is NASA's Orion astronaut capsule, built
by Lockheed Martin Corp. It is designed to separate from the
rocket in space, ferry humans toward the moon and rendezvous
with a separate spacecraft that will take astronauts to the
lunar surface.
For the Aug. 29 mission, called Artemis 1, the Orion capsule
will launch atop the Space Launch System without any humans and
orbit 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 on Aug. 29, the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration has backup launch dates on Sept. 2 and Sept. 5.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette; Additional reporting by Dan
Whitcomb; editing by Jonathan Oatis, Leslie Adler and Gerry
Doyle)
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