News on private spaceflight
- Google Lunar X Prizet teams call for science payloads
- NASA tests GPS monitoring system for big U.S. Quakes
- Nort-korea's UNHA-2 rocket ready for launch
- SpaceX launch to ISS April 30
- Lego-man in space
- First Vega launch feb 9
- NASA's Nanosail-D 'Sails' Home - Mission Complete
- Europes first Vega rocket to be launched in January
- Re-use of de-commisioned satelittes
- 3 successes for Europa
- Historic launch of first Galileo navigation-satellittes
- Spaceship Company one step closer to space tourism
- "We have lost control of the space environment"
- Plans for space-reactors
- China to launch space station module
- Danish rocket-launch friday
- New megthod for tracking spacejunk: Star-occultations
- Renewed interest in European spaceplane
- US Defence plans for "100 year spaceship" to nearest stars
- USA are worrying over China in space and seeks rules
- First European launch of a Soyuz rocket
- SpaceX milestone accomplished
- Nanosail descends to Earth
- NASA awards contracts for commercial crew-transportation
- Students launches record-breaking balloon
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Succesfull test of new rocket engine
Friday, 12 November 2010 11:42
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| Spaceflight - Private spaceflight |
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NASA's John C. Stennis Space Center in Mississippi conducted a successful test firing Wednesday of the liquid-fuel AJ26 engine that will power the first stage of Orbital Sciences Corp.'s Taurus II space launch vehicle. NASA's John C. Stennis Space Center in Mississippi conducted a successful test firing Wednesday of the liquid-fuel AJ26 engine that will power the first stage of Orbital Sciences Corp.'s Taurus II space launch vehicle. Orbital and its engine supplier, Aerojet, test-fired the engine on Stennis' E-1 test stand. The test directly supports NASA's partnerships to enable commercial cargo flights to the International Space Station. Doug Cooke, associate administrator for the Exploration Systems Mission Directorate at NASA said: "This brings us one step closer to realizing NASA's goals for accessing low Earth orbit via commercial spacecraft." Source: NASA |




