NASA officially unveiled the core stage of its new Space Launch System moon rocket for planned Artemis missions at the Michoud Assembly Facility near
A day of speeches and praise for the workers also focused Monday on the astronomical cost of the program, which recently was estimated at
NASA Administrator
"NASA estimates the cost of a single SLS rocket in a given year to be between about
He added: "NASA is currently in negotiations with
The Artemis program as announced over the summer envisions multiple lunar missions to carry astronauts back to the moon to establish a permanent presence.
"The more we buy, the more the cost per unit comes down," Bridenstine said during his speech Monday. "We have to think about how many we're going to buy when we get ready to take the first rocket out of the facility and test it."
The rocket's giant core stage is in final testing in
The core, or first stage, makes up two-thirds of the rocket at 212 feet tall with a diameter of 27.6 feet. It stores huge amounts of supercooled liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen with
A second core stage for the Artemis 2 mission is being manufactured at Michoud. The Trump administration has set a goal of sending people back to the moon by 2024 on the Artemis 3 mission, but funding approval from
Bridenstine said some parts of the mission can be fulfilled even without additional appropriations, but that's not what NASA would prefer. He said the agency has received approval for
The NASA administrator sidestepped a question about making lunar rockets reusable -- as
Bridenstine said the Artemis program is designed to be much more sustainable than the Apollo moon program ever was. That's partly because NASA intends to build an orbiting lunar habitat,
NASA and the administration have estimated the Artemis mission needs
"Apollo was not sustainable. The cost was too high because everything got thrown away on every mission," Bridenstine said. "We would like to see the Orion crew capsule have elements of it be reusable by Artemis."
SLS is the only rocket that is "human-rated,"
"We want the other guys, the private companies, to succeed because we want a menu of rockets to be able to use," he said.
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