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<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8">
<meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=edge">
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
<title>ExploreTech</title>
<link href="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/dist/css/bootstrap.min.css" rel="stylesheet">
<link rel="stylesheet" href="index.css">
</head>
<body>
<div id="header-bg-post">
<header class="mx-4 p-3 text-white vh-100">
<div class="d-flex justify-content-between align-items-center ">
<div id="logo" class="d-none d-lg-inline">
<span class="h3"><a class="text-decoration-none" href="index.html">ExploreTech</a></span>
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<li class="nav-item dropdown"><a class="nav-link dropdown-toggle" id="dropmenu-one" href="#" role="button" data-bs-toggle="dropdown" aria-expanded="false">Post</a>
<ul class="dropdown-menu dropdown-menu-dark" aria-labelledby="dropmenu-one">
<li class="dropdown-item"><a class="text-decoration-none text-light" href="1stpost.html">1st-Post</a></li>
<li class="dropdown-item"><a class="text-decoration-none text-light" href="2ndpost.html">2nd-Post</a</li>
<li class="dropdown-item"><a class="text-decoration-none text-light" href="3rdpost.html">3rd-Post</a</li>
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<hr class="mb-lg-2">
<div class="w-75 justify-content-center align-content-center row m-auto" >
<div class="h2 text-white mb-3 col-12">NASA’S NEW MONSTER ROCKET SET TO ROLL OUT AFTER MORE THAN A DECADE OF DELAYS</div>
<img class="img-fluid img-thumbnail w-75" src="https://www.nasa.gov/sites/default/files/styles/full_width_feature/public/thumbnails/image/icps_ws.jpg" alt="nasa_rocket">
</div>
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<div id="post" class="rounded-3 p-5 mb-5 mx-5 mt-2">
<div class="w-75 m-auto justify-content-center align-content-center">
<details class="h1 text-secondary">Details:</details>
<div class="fs-5 fst-normal">
<div class="p-3 mb-4">
After more than a decade of painstaking development and numerous delays, NASA’s new mega-rocket, the Space Launch System, will roll out into the open Florida air this afternoon, fully stacked and nearly ready to fly to space. Once in the great outdoors, it will embark on an 11-hour journey to its primary launchpad in Cape Canaveral, where it will undergo testing ahead of its debut flight beyond the Moon, set to occur sometime this year.
</div>
<div class="p-3 mb-4">
It’s a major milestone that could herald the beginning of NASA’s return to the lunar surface. Designed to carry people and cargo into deep space, the Space Launch System, or SLS, is set to play a starring role in NASA’s Artemis program, the space agency’s major initiative to put the first woman and the first person of color on the Moon by the mid-2020s.
</div>
<div class="p-3 mb-4">
That’s the rosy picture of SLS’s future — but today’s debut comes with a long and fraught history. SLS is perhaps best known for being perennially delayed, with the rocket’s rollout always just over the horizon. SLS was conceived in 2010 and originally promised to fly as early as 2017, only to have that target date pushed back again and again. Its tardiness has garnered the rocket plenty of critics, who also balk at the vehicle’s enormous price tag. A recent budget estimate by NASA’s inspector general puts the cost of the rocket’s first four flights at $4.1 billion each, and the long-term operational cost is still something of a mystery. Plenty have called for the program’s cancelation in favor of funding faster and more cost-efficient alternatives to deep space, notably those being built by nimbler commercial companies.
</div>
<div class="p-3 mb-4">
Despite all the naysayers, the SLS team has continued to push toward the finish line. It’s paid off: the rocket is no longer a CGI animation created by NASA’s animators, but an actual rocket — engines, tanks, tubes and all — and its launch may finally be imminent. “It is good to see it actually rolling out after all the trials and tribulations,” Cristina Chaplain, a space analyst and former director of the US Government Accountability Office that audited the SLS, tells The Verge. “That’s what happens with a lot of these programs. They go through a lot of ups and downs, some more than others, but they get there. Twice the cost, and twice the time, but they get there.”
</div>
<div class="p-3 mb-4">
The rocket still has a lot to prove to its critics, though, many of whom felt that the vehicle should never have existed in the first place. Even as the rocket creeps to its launch pad, there are other comparable vehicles being built — notably SpaceX’s future Starship rocket — that could do what SLS does, potentially for a much lower cost.
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Something About This Site
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this site was created for providing knowledge about tech . And we always try to satisfy our users .this site creates by a group of computer technology students. If you want to know about this group,u can take a tour on our <a class="text-decoration-none text-light" href="About.html">About</a> page.
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© 2022 by The Explorer. Created with CMT-B team.
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You can type your email below and click on the send button for getting the latest news by your email:
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<button class="btn bg-gradient mt-4 px-4 text-light btn-primary">Send</button>
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<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/[email protected]/dist/js/bootstrap.bundle.min.js"></script>
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