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12/05/2014

NASA Test Launches Its New Orion Spacecraft

What it looked like from the Orion spacecraft atop a


United Launch Alliance Delta 4-Heavy rocket as it
climbs to orbit during the first test flight Friday Dec. 5,
2014. (NASA photo)

NASA Test Launches Its New Orion


Spacecraft
The United States space agency has successfully tested a new spacecraft that one day could carry astronauts to
Mars and beyond.
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NASA, launched the Orion spacecraft from Cape Canaveral Air
Force Station in Florida. Less than five hours later, Orion landed in the Pacific Ocean near Baja California. The
spacecraft had completed two orbits before returning to Earth. NASA called the test nearly flawless, or without
mistakes.
The test took Orion about 14 times farther from our planet than the International Space Station.
NASA scientists used the flight to test the launch, control and reentry systems of the new exploration vehicle. NASA
scientists were especially interested in how the spaceships heat shield would perform as it faced temperatures of
2,200 degrees Celsius during reentry.
Recent spaceflight incidents raise concerns
The test of the Orion spacecraft comes after two setbacks in space exploration. Recent accidents have shown how
difficult and dangerous space travel can be. In late October, an unmanned, privately-owned rocket exploded as it left
NASAs launch center on Wallops Island, Virginia. The Antares rocket was to carry tons of supplies to the International
Space Station. The explosion has raised questions about the engine design used by Orbital Sciences Corporation,
the company that built the Antares rocket. The incident is still under investigation.
Days later, a problem during the test flight of a manned spaceship resulted in a deadly crash in California. One pilot
on Virgin Galactics SpaceShipTwo was killed and the other was seriously injured. Virgin Galactic is a spaceflight
company. It plans to develop a space tourism industry by taking people into space for a fee.
Investigators are looking at the possibility that one of the pilots made a mistake by attempting to slow down the
spaceship too soon. The head of the company, Richard Branson, has denied that he ignored safety warnings about
the spaceship before the crash. The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board is leading the investigation into that
accident.
Orion is NASA's return to manned spaceflight
For NASA, Orion represents a return to manned exploration of space after the retirement of the space shuttle in 2011.
The agency hopes Orion will be able to carry humans to, what it calls, deep space: the Moon, Mars or beyond.
Orion has three main parts: the crew module, the service module and the launch abort system. When fully developed,

the crew module will hold four astronauts. For this test flight, a United Alliance Delta IV Heavy rocket will carry Orion
into space. NASA says this rocket will not be used for Orions manned spaceflights. A different rocket, called the
Space Launch System, will be developed instead.
The space agency held a news conference two days before the planned launch date. Officials explained to reporters
what NASA was hoping to accomplish with the test flight.
The officials noted that not all of the systems involved in Orion were ready. They said the main purpose was to test
the control system for the spacecraft. Lockheed Martin Program Manager Mike Hawes said the aviation systems were
ready and much of the computer software was complete. But, he said life support systems for astronauts were not
ready and would not be part of the test.
Mark Geyer is the Program Manager for Orion. He told reporters that the test flight would cost over $370 million. The
capsule will be reused for another test flight. He noted that Orion is still in the development stage.
NASA scientists are calling the test, Exploration Flight Test-1. They say Orion will travel 5,800 kilometers into space
and orbit the earth twice before splashing down in the ocean.
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