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Space program of the United States

This page is a summary of the US government space programme, part of a series of such summaries and covers all aspects pertinent to the nation's space progamme.
Note that this article does not cover aeronautics or aerospace, the history of or complete scope of NASA or US commercial spaceflight.

The US national space program is managed by NASA on behalf of the United States Government and can be divided up into three main areas:

Contents

Active Human Spaceflight Projects

Space Shuttle Orbiter

Main article: Space Shuttle

United Space Alliance

Lockheed Martin

Orbiter Processing Facility

International Space Station

Main article: International Space Station

Developmental Human Spaceflight Projects

Project Constellation

Main article: Crew Exploration Vehicle

Project Prometheus

Main article: Project Prometheus

Solar System Exploration

Mercury

Main article: MESSENGER

Mars

Mars is the current focus of US robotic exploration. Available every 26 months, launch windows to Mars afford regularly spaced opportunities to capitalise on planetary alignments and reduce fuel costs and flight times. NASA's current forcast calls for the following:

See also: Exploration of Mars

Jupiter

Main article: Jupiter Icy Moons Orbiter

See also: Galileo spacecraft

Saturn

Main article: Cassini-Huygens

Kuiper Belt

Main article: New Horizons

Educational Outreach

NASA's Office of Education is responsible for overseeing all outreach programs the organisation is involved in. These range from liaising with the Astronaut Office and their Educator Astronaut Corps, through projects and seminars held at universities to attract new blood into NASA, to production of the Why Files children's science show.

Last updated: 08-24-2005 01:48:10
Last updated: 01-04-2007 01:18:57
The contents of this article are licensed from Wikipedia.org under the
GNU Free Documentation License. See original document.
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