CAPE CANAVERAL, FLORIDA—After a delay yesterday due to stuck cryogenic valves, NASA’s Orion EFT-1 mission departed from Space Launch Complex 37B from Cape Canaveral this morning at 7:05am EST. The launch marks an important milestone: it’s the first attempt since the Apollo missions ended 42 years ago to put a new spacecraft designed for manned missions beyond low earth orbit (LEO).
For NASA, Orion EFT-1 (Exploration Flight Test 1) is more than just a return to goals more ambitious than low-Earth orbit. It represents the restoration of our manned capability to explore the rest of the solar system, starting with a planned lunar rendezvous with Orion’s second planned flight, EM-1 (Exploration Mission 1). Mars is the ultimate goal, but that seems like more of a dream of NASA administrators at the moment. Speaking to the media two days ago, NASA Chief Administrator Charlie Bolden and his staff made this very clear—Mars is the goal, but the steps to get there are clearly under consideration, and the team is very aware of the political and budgetary realities that it will have to overcome.
Former NASA Deputy Administrator Lori Garver spoke more pessimistically about both EFT-1 and NASA’s upcoming Orion-based Mars plans in a Bloomberg interview earlier this week. “This is a test of flight that’ll go for four hours, go no father than certainly satellites we launch all the time, on a commercial rocket we’ve launched many times, testing a heat shield which is very likely not to be used in 20 years when we actually go to Mars,” she said. “I understand NASA likes to launch things; this is something the contractors and the politicians who’ve sold this missions to the Congress have decided they would like to proceed with, but it’s not something that in my view is be best use of NASA resources.”
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