NASA rolls Artemis 2 rocket to the pad
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NASA has announced the demolition of several historic testing and simulation facilities at Marshall Space Flight Center.
NASA has demolished the Propulsion and Structural Test Facility and Dynamic Test Stand in Huntsville to modernize the Marshall Space Flight Center and preserve their history digitally.
NASA and Boeing are still contending with the fallout attached to the failed Starliner test flight. The next Starliner mission, as a result, will be unmanned.
A major step toward launch day is complete as NASA's Artemis II astronauts ran through a countdown demonstration test.
HUNTSVILLE, Ala. ( WAFF) - The landscape at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center has changed forever. Two very large and critical structures during the Apollo and Shuttle eras were demolished Saturday morning. Their “leveling” is part of MSFC’s “modernization plan” to eliminate 25 buildings or facilities considered obsolete.
People have played the video game DOOM on anything with a microchip, it seems, from fridge displays, to pregnancy test kits and even ChatGPT. Now enthusiasts can add government and commercial
NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, removed two of its historic test stands – the Propulsion and Structural Test Facility and the Dynamic Test Facility – with carefully
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Starliner’s cargo-only future marks a pivotal test for NASA’s redundancy goals
But when Boeing’s CST-100 Starliner spacecraft was launched in June of 2024 with Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams aboard, it was expected to be an eight-day Crew Flight Test. This would mark the final development phase of the spacecraft before it could be launched towards its commercial flights.
NASA is moving forward with plans to demolish three iconic structures at the agency’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville.