Final preparations before the moon's goal - Liberation

Final preparations before the moon’s goal – Liberation

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On August 29, NASA’s Space Center in Florida will launch the world’s largest rocket bound for the moon, without a crew for this rehearsal. This project, which has been repeatedly criticized and postponed, is now making Americans shaken. Large crowds are expected on Cape Canaveral Day.

Authorities expect at least 100,000 people to arrive. The tourist office advises to bring something to drink, eat and entertain the children on the road, as well as regular urination breaks because the traffic will be very heavy. The hotels overlooking the sea are already full. Some even make a space-style cocktail menu for their bar on the terrace, where you have to reserve your table several weeks in advance. Today’s big crowd will be in Cape Canaveral. On August 29 at 2:33 p.m., NASA’s Space Center in Florida will launch the world’s largest rocket bound for the moon.

Follow in the footsteps of Neil Armstrong

As in the days of the Apollo program in the 1970s, Americans wanted to do bunny jumps in dusty pits, and they had to do things in order. First, build a rocket more powerful than all those responsible for sending satellites into Earth’s orbit: Like the legendary Saturn V, the new Space Launch System (SLS) should be able to propel a crewed spacecraft and all of its materials to the Moon. Next, start a vacuum mission, sending the spacecraft to orbit in space to test its functioning without risking human lives. This is the goal of the Artemis 1 mission, scheduled for August 29. Finally, the following missions will welcome astronauts to the lunar surface to follow in the footsteps of Neil Armstrong.

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