NASA Administrator Tours Michoud Assembly Facility, Highlighting Space Launch System Rocket Progress

NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine Visits Michoud

NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine toured NASA’s Michoud Assembly Facility in New Orleans Thursday, August 14, 2019, to see the latest progress in manufacturing and assembling NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS) rocket, the world’s most powerful rocket. Outfitted with the latest in modern manufacturing tools, the Louisiana facility is producing the core stages, the powerhouse of the SLS rocket, for the first and second Artemis missions to the Moon. Together with four RS-25 engines, the rocket’s massive 212-foot-tall core stage — the largest stage NASA has ever built — and its twin solid rocket boosters will produce 8.8 million pounds of thrust to send NASA’s Orion spacecraft, astronauts and supplies beyond Earth’s orbit to the Moon and, ultimately, Mars. Offering more payload mass, volume capability and energy to speed missions through space, the SLS rocket, along with NASA’s Gateway in lunar orbit and Orion, is part of NASA’s backbone for deep space exploration and the Artemis lunar program. No other rocket is capable of carrying astronauts in Orion around the Moon in a single mission.

Photographer Jude Guidry