NASA's new rocket lifts off on short test flight

AP | By, Cape Canaveral
Updated on: Oct 29, 2009 12:01 am IST

NASA's newest rocket blasted off on a brief test flight on Wednesday, taking the first step in a back-to-the-moon program that could be shelved by the White House.

NASA's newest rocket blasted off on a brief test flight on Wednesday, taking the first step in a back-to-the-moon program that could be shelved by the White House.

HT Image
HT Image

The 327-foot (100-meter) Ares I-X rocket resembled a giant white pencil as it shot into the sky, delayed a day by poor weather.

Nearly twice the height of the spaceship it's supposed to replace -- the shuttle -- the experimental rocket carried no passengers or payload, only throwaway ballast and hundreds of sensors. The flight cost USD 445 million.

It was the first time in nearly 30 years that a new rocket took off from Kennedy Space Centre. Columbia made the maiden voyage for the shuttle fleet back in 1981.

Liftoff, in fact, occurred 48 years and one day after the first launch of a Saturn rocket, a precursor to what carried astronauts to the moon during the Apollo program. The Saturn V moon rockets were the tallest ever built, an impressive 363 feet.

Wednesday's launch, years in the making, attracted a large crowd. The prototype moon rocket took off from a former shuttle launch pad at 1130 am.

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Get the latest headlines from US news and global updates from Pakistan, Nepal, UK, Bangladesh, and Russia get all the latest headlines in one place with including 3I/ATLAS Liveon Hindustan Times.
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