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Moon rocket passes crucial design test

  • Story Highlights
  • NASA approves the preliminary design review of the planned Ares I rocket
  • The Ares would launch astronauts into space by 2015 and back to the moon by 2020
  • It's the first early design review approval for a rocket to carry astronauts since 1973
  • A more detailed test, a critical design review, is scheduled for March 2011

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WASHINGTON (AP) -- NASA's new moon rocket passed a crucial design milestone late Wednesday.

NASA provided this image of the Ares 1 rocket, which it hopes will return astronauts to the moon by 2020.

NASA provided this image of the Ares 1 rocket, which it hopes will return astronauts to the moon by 2020.

Senior NASA management unanimously approved the preliminary design review of the planned Ares I rocket that would launch astronauts into space by 2015 and back to the moon by 2020.

Next year there will be another narrowly focused "delta" preliminary design review for one pending engineering problem: too much shaking after launch.

This is the first preliminary design review approval for a rocket to carry astronauts since 1973, when the space shuttle passed the same stage, said Steve Cook, NASA's Ares projects manager.

These reviews are to make sure that the broad design, plans and software mesh properly and pass early safety questions. A more detailed test, a critical design review, is scheduled for March 2011.

Most of the rocket is not built yet.

"This is where we wrap the entire vehicle together to say we have a sound design from stem to stern," Cook said in a Wednesday evening teleconference. "It's really a big step in our journey to launch."

NASA engineers said last month that they had figured out how to fix the remaining shaking issue with giant shock absorbers, but still more work is needed before that can pass review.

About 10 percent of the problems that engineers brought up are still to be resolved but do not require separate reviews, including noise problems and questions whether the rocket could fly through rough weather, especially lightning, Cook said. NASA also is looking at potential problems that could come when the lower part of the rocket separates.

The Orion crew capsule, which will sit on top of the Ares I, will have its preliminary design review in late 2009.

One issue raised was that engineers were able to shrink the bottom part of the rocket by 8 inches, and they have to make sure that the launch platform design is also shrunk by that much. It is a matter mostly of paperwork, Cook said.

NASA is spending about $3 billion a year on the return-to-the moon program.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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