Moon and Mars at Kennedy

    Work on Ares and Launch Pad Continue Lightning tower construction at pad 39B Image above: At NASA's Kennedy Space Center, workers construct lightning towers at pad 39B. Photo credit: NASA/Jim Grossmann
    › High-res Image

    August 8, 2008
    On Launch Pad 39B, workers are installing a lightning protection system. Each of the three new lightning towers will be 500 feet tall with an additional 100-foot fiberglass mast atop supporting a wire centenary system. This improved lightning protection system also allows for the taller height of the Ares I compared to the space shuttle.

    The pad, previously used for Apollo and shuttle launches, is being modified to support future launches of Ares and Orion spacecraft.

    Ares I is a two-stage rocket that will transport the Orion crew exploration vehicle to low Earth orbit. The first stage will consist of a single reusable solid propellant rocket booster, similar to those used on space shuttles, with an additional fifth segment. The second, or upper, stage will consist of a J-2X liquid oxygen- and liquid hydrogen-fueled main engine and a new upper stage fuel tank.

    The first Ares test launch is scheduled for April 2009.

Features

What Goes Up, Must Come Down

Ares parachute lead engineer Dave Hillebrandt
09.09.08

NASA won't send anything into space that needs to return -- without a parachute.

› Read More

The LRO/LCROSS Flight to the Moon

Artistic drawing of the LRO spacecraft
06.03.08

How to plan for a moon mission 101.

› Read More

Ares Tests Roll Along

Technicians evaluate on test components for the Ares I.
03.26.08

Engineers tested the components for the Ares I roll control system during recent evaluations.

› Read More

Orion's Prototype Heat Shield Undergoes Tests

Workers prepare prototype heat shield for testing.
01.31.08

Orion's prototype heat shield undergoes rigorous testing.

› Read More

Kennedy's Desert RATS

This flexible dust screen is one of many technologies tested in Desert RATS.
12.07.07

Three teams from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida journey west each year to participate in the agency's Desert Research and Technology Studies.

› Read More

Latest News

Multimedia Links

Related Multimedia

Related Sites