NASA Names New Crew Exploration Vehicle Orion

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Aug. 22, 2006

Michael Braukus/Beth Dickey
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1979/2087

Kelly Humphries
Johnson Space Center, Houston
281-483-5111 

RELEASE: 06-299

NASA NAMES NEW CREW EXPLORATION VEHICLE ORION

NASA announced Tuesday that its new crew exploration vehicle will be 
named Orion. 

Orion is the vehicle NASA's Constellation Program is developing to 
carry a new generation of explorers back to the moon and later to 
Mars. Orion will succeed the space shuttle as NASA's primary vehicle 
for human space exploration. 

Orion's first flight with astronauts onboard is planned for no later 
than 2014 to the International Space Station. Its first flight to the 
moon is planned for no later than 2020. 

Orion is named for one of the brightest, most familiar and easily 
identifiable constellations. 

"Many of its stars have been used for navigation and guided explorers 
to new worlds for centuries," said Orion Project Manager Skip 
Hatfield. "Our team, and all of NASA - and, I believe, our country - 
grows more excited with every step forward this program takes. The 
future for space exploration is coming quickly." 

In June, NASA announced the launch vehicles under development by the 
Constellation Program have been named Ares, a synonym for Mars. The 
booster that will launch Orion will be called Ares I, and a larger 
heavy-lift launch vehicle will be known as Ares V. 

Orion will be capable of transporting cargo and up to six crew members 
to and from the International Space Station. It can carry four 
crewmembers for lunar missions. Later, it can support crew transfers 
for Mars missions. 

Orion borrows its shape from space capsules of the past, but takes 
advantage of the latest technology in computers, electronics, life 
support, propulsion and heat protection systems. The capsule's 
conical shape is the safest and most reliable for re-entering the 
Earth's atmosphere, especially at the velocities required for a 
direct return form the moon. 

Orion will be 16.5 feet in diameter and have a mass of about 25 tons. 
Inside, it will have more than 2.5 times the volume of an Apollo 
capsule. The spacecraft will return humans to the moon to stay for 
long periods as a testing ground for the longer journey to Mars. 

NASA's Johnson Space Center, Houston, manages the Constellation 
Program and the agency's Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, 
Ala., manages the Exploration Launch Projects' office for the 
Exploration Systems Mission Directorate, Washington. 

For more information about NASA and agency programs, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/home 

	
-end-



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