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NASA s top official says Blue Origin lawsuit could delay human return to moon
businessinsider.com.au - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from businessinsider.com.au Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
NASA has successfully fired its new moon rocket s 4 core engines - a key step towards a launch later this year
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NASA has successfully fired its new moon rocket s 4 core engines - a key step towards a launch later this year
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Watch NASA test-fire the world s most powerful rocket stage - a critical step towards the next moon mission mmcfalljohnsen@insider.com (Morgan McFall-Johnsen) © Provided by Business Insider The core stage of NASA s Space Launch System fires its engines for a hot fire test on January 16, 2021, at the Stennis Space Center in Mississippi. NASA/Robert Markowitz
If the hot fire succeeds, the Space Launch System rocket could be ready to launch in November.
Watch the test fire live on NASA TV below.
Update: The SLS core stage successfully fired its engines for more than eight minutes on Thursday. Read more here.
A critical test of NASA s moon rocket ended abruptly on Saturday, possibly dashing hopes of launching in 2021 mmcfalljohnsen@businessinsider.com (Morgan McFall-Johnsen) © NASA TV An SLS engine burns propellant (left), then abruptly shuts down (right) during a hot fire test on January 16, 2021. NASA TV
The test automatically ended due to an issue with an engine s hydraulic system, NASA said Tuesday.
The rocket was scheduled to launch in November 2021 and kick off the agency s Artemis moon-landing program, but the new issue could delay that launch and the return of humans to the lunar surface for the first time since 1972.
NASA s mega-sized moon rocket hit a snag during a critical test on Saturday, and the error could further delay the agency s effort to send astronauts back to the moon.