Artemis II stacking and preparations underway even as SLS faces budget cuts
Date:
Thu, 15 May 2025 21:03:38 +0000
Description:
The SLS program continues with preparations for the first human spaceflight 
to the Moons vicinity The post Artemis II stacking and preparations underway  even as SLS faces budget cuts appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
FULL STORY ======================================================================
The SLS program continues with preparations for the first human spaceflight 
to the Moons vicinity since 1972. Currently scheduled for April 2026, the  missions date could be moved up to as early as February if no major issues  arise. Meanwhile, the programs future faces uncertainties as the proposed 
NASA budget for Fiscal Year 2026 aims to end the SLS and Orion programs after  the Artemis III lunar landing. 
 
 
The SLS for Artemis II is now fully stacked on Mobile Launcher 1, missing 
only the Orion and its ascent abort motor fairing. NASA started stacking  Artemis IIs two five-segment solid rocket boosters in November 2024. Workers  completed the boosters stacking on Feb. 19 when the forward assemblies   containing the nose cones, avionics, and separation motors  were attached to  the boosters. 
The solid rocket boosters, derived from the boosters that powered 135 Space  Shuttle flights, originally were certified to be stacked no more than one 
year before flight. NASA studied the problem and approved waivers prior to 
the Artemis I launch based on its analysis of how the boosters handled the  stresses of being stacked upright for long periods of time. The Artemis II 
SLS Launch Vehicle Stage Adapter installation onto the core stage. (Credit:  NASA) 
The SLS core stage, undergoing processing in the Vehicle Assembly Building  (VAB)s High Bay 2, was stacked between the boosters on March 23 at the VAB  High Bay 3, where Mobile Launcher 1 stands. On April 3, teams lifted the  Launch Vehicle Stage Adapter (LVSA), which connects the core stage to the  second stage, or Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage (ICPS). Connecting the 
two elements finished on April 12, when hard mate was completed. See Also  Artemis Section L2 Artemis Click here to Join L2 
However, some unexpected work was needed after NASA stacked the core stage. A  hydraulic leak in a main oxidizer valve actuator in one of the SLS core 
stages four RS-25 engines caused NASA to order an engine replacement. The  number four engine, E2063, is now off the stack, with E2061 installed in its  place by the end of April. 
E2063 was assembled in 2015 using some parts that had flown on previous  Shuttle missions but had never flown. After the engines repair, it will fly 
on a future flight if the SLS program continues. Its replacement, E2061,  received its certification for flight in 2008 and flew on the STS-130 and  STS-134 missions, some of the last before Shuttles retirement. E2061 was  originally assigned for the Artemis III lunar landing mission. Artemis II  mission concept and engine information graphic. (Credit: L3Harris) 
Workers swapped the engines while the core stage was in the vertical position  on Mobile Launcher 1, marking the first-ever RS-25 replacement in the SLS  program. Previously, RS-25s  then known as Space Shuttle Main Engines  were  replaced vertically during the Space Shuttle program. 
The engine replacement, finished by the end of April, is not expected to  affect the timeline for Artemis IIs flight readiness. With the core stage for  Artemis II completed, the missions second stage became the next item to be  stacked. Following its arrival on at the VAB April 15, NASA mated the ICPS,  derived from the Delta familys upper stage, to the Artemis II stacks LVSA on  Thursday, May 1. 
The next lift activity involving Artemis II will not take place for several  months. During the intervening period, systems are to undergo checkout on the  stacked vehicle and its ground launch control systems. The Mobile Launcher 1  umbilicals and plates need connecting to the SLS; the umbilicals provide the  SLS with power, cooling, and fluids while also allowing data to be exchanged  between the rocket and launch control. The Orion spacecraft for Artemis II  moving to the Multi-Payload Processing Facility. (Credit: NASA) 
The Orion spacecraft for Artemis II finished final assembly by the end of  April before being handed over by Lockheed Martin to NASA Exploration Ground  Systems on May 1. On Saturday, May 3, Orion moved from the Operations and  Checkout Building at the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) to the Multi-Payload  Processing Facility (MPPF). While at the MPPF, hypergolic propellant and 
other consumables are scheduled for loading onto Orion. 
Once loading Orions commodities finishes at the MPPF, the capsule will move 
to the Launch Abort System Facility (LASF) for assembly and installation of  the launch abort motor and shroud. The launch abort system is critical for  allowing the crew to survive if an off-nominal event occurs during ascent 
that endangers the vehicle and spacecraft. 
Orions move to the LASF may happen around the August timeframe, and the  spacecrafts stacking is the next major task after that. A stacking of Orion  atop SLS in fall could allow a rollout of the Artemis II SLS and Mobile  Launcher 1 to the launch complex around the very end of 2025 or the start of  2026. The Artemis II crew. L to R: Jeremy Hansen, Victor Glover, Reid 
Wiseman, Christina Koch. (Credit: NASA) 
While Artemis IIs elements were being assembled, NASA agreed to fly a South  Korean CubeSat aboard the mission. NASA and the Korean space agency KASA  signed an agreement on May 2 to fly the K-Rad Cube, a satellite designed to  measure radiations effect on human tissue during the passage of the Van Allen  radiation belts. 
NASA is also discussing the possibility of additional CubeSat payloads, which  would fly aboard the adapter connecting Orion to the ICPS upper stage. The  agency signed a similar agreement with the German space agency DLR in  September 2024, and recently announced the addition of a space weather 
CubeSat for the Saudi Space Agency. 
While Artemis II is being processed in the VAB, mission elements for Artemis  III are also being prepared. Artemis IIIs liquid oxygen tank moved into the  spray-on insulation cell at the Michoud Assembly Facility in Louisiana on  April 25. The liquid hydrogen tank for this mission already had its 
insulation foam sprayed on, and both tanks for the core stage will be mated 
to the interstage before transport to KSC. The core stages completion is  realistically possible in 2026. 
Elements necessary for post-Artemis III missions are still in work for the  moment. The Mobile Launcher 2, required for the SLS Block 1B and Block 2, is  under construction at KSC. The sixth and seventh modules of the tower were  added to the structure on April 22. In Promontory, Utah, Northrop Grumman has  been preparing the first static test firing of the upgraded Booster  Obsolescence and Life Extension (BOLE) solid rocket booster, although no date  for this test has been announced at this time. The Artemis III hydrogen tank  moving on April 22, 2025, after application of its insulation. (Credit:  NASA/Steven B. Seidel/Michael DeMocker) 
The recent NASA Fiscal Year 2026 budget request would fund Artemis II and III  but cancel all SLS missions from Artemis IV onward, as well as the SLS Block  1B and Block 2 vehicles. Elements of these vehicles, like the Exploration  Upper Stage and BOLE face cancelation, as well as the human-tended cis-lunar  Gateway space station, if the budget becomes law. 
The release of the skinny budget request to the United States Congress is 
just the start of a months-long process, and both houses of Congress will 
need to pass the budget before it can become law. The budget cuts NASAs top  line from close to $25 billion to close to $19 billion, and the line item  details will be released at a later time. 
The final budget passage will depend on whether Congress supports the  potential cuts, and representatives from states with SLS facilities, as well  as states with other NASA activities in danger, will no doubt have their  opinions on these reductions. NASA Administrator nominee Jared Isaacman  appearing before the Senate Commerce Committee on April 9. (Credit: NASA/Bill  Ingalls) 
Meanwhile, the Senate is in the process of installing Jared Isaacman as the  next NASA Administrator. The full Senate will vote on his nomination after 
the Senate Commerce Committee passed the nomination on April 30 with 19 votes  in favor and 9 against. Isaacmans confirmation is expected, and he will be  heavily involved in the budget process going forward. 
Isaacman stated his support for not only lunar operations to be continuous,  enduring, and routine, but also for the current federal law to conduct human  landings on the Moon before any human Mars exploration. Committee chair Ted  Cruz and Ranking Member Maria Cantwell supported the Isaacman nomination on  that basis. 
The next six months will likely determine the fate of the SLS, Orion, 
Gateway, and Artemis programs as well as the future of U.S. space exploration  in general. 
 (Lead image: Artemis II upper stage installation atop the SLS core stage.  Credit: NASA) 
 
The post Artemis II stacking and preparations underway even as SLS faces  budget cuts appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story: 
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/05/artemis-ii-update-3/
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