The rocket and capsule that NASA is proposing to return astronauts to the moon would fly just twice in the next 10 years and cost as much as 38 BILLION, according to internal NASA documents obtained by the ORLANDO SENTINEL, writes Mark Matthews.The money would pay for a new heavy-lift rocket and Apollo-like crew capsule that eventually could take astronauts to the moon and beyond. But it would not be enough to pay for a lunar landing - or for more than one manned test flight, in 2021.That timeline and price tag could pose serious problems for supporters of the new spacecraft, which is being built from recycled parts of the shuttle and the now-defunct Constellation moon program. It effectively means that it will take the U.S. manned-space program more than 50 years - if ever - to duplicate its 1969 landing on the moon.That is certain to infuriate NASA supporters in Congress, who last year ordered NASA to build a new heavy-lift rocket by December 2016 - a deadline the agency says it can't meet. And it may well convince others there's no good reason not to slash NASA's budget as part of a recent deal to cut federal spending by at least 2.1 trillion over 10 years. The ORLANDO SENTINEL PROVIDES MORE.
Source: space-wanderers.blogspot.com
Sunday, 18 December 2011
Congressional Heavy Lift Rocket 38 Billion
Labels:
aliens,
government of the united states,
spaceflight
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