From UPI.com:
NASA space program clears milestone review
An artist rendering of the various configurations of NASA's Space Launch System (SLS). Credit: NASA
WASHINGTON, July 27 (UPI) -- NASA says
the rocket system that will launch humans farther into space than ever
before has reached a milestone by passing a major agency revue.
The Space Launch System Program completed a combined System
Requirements Review and System Definition Review, which set requirements
of the overall launch vehicle system, meaning SLS moves to its
preliminary design phase, the agency reported.
The review set technical, performance, cost and schedule requirements to provide on-time development of the heavy-lift rocket.
The SLS is intended to launch NASA's Orion spacecraft and other
payloads and provide the capability for human exploration beyond low
Earth orbit.
This new heavy-lift launch vehicle will make it possible for
explorers to reach beyond our current limits, to nearby asteroids, Mars
and its moons and to destinations even farther across our solar system,"
said
William Gerstenmaier, associate administrator for the Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate at NASA headquarters in Washington.
"The in-depth assessment confirmed the basic vehicle concepts of the
SLS, allowing the team to move forward and start more detailed
engineering design."
SLS reached the review milestone less than 10 months after the program's inception.
"This is a pivotal moment for this program and for NASA," SLS Program
Manager Todd May said. "This has been a whirlwind experience from a
design standpoint.
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