Nasa practices retrieving Orion craft

Nasa's Orion spacecraft test vehicle sits in the well deck of the USS Anchorage at the Port of Los Angeles.

Nasa's Orion spacecraft test vehicle sits in the well deck of the USS Anchorage at the Port of Los Angeles.

Published Aug 8, 2014

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Los Angeles - The US Navy and Nasa wrapped up the second round of practice recoveries of the Orion spacecraft, which is designed to bring humans to the moon, asteroids and, eventually, to Mars.

The tests took place from Aug. 1 to Aug. 4 a few hundred miles off the coast of Baja California, Mexico, where the Orion will splash down Dec. 4 after reaching an altitude of 3 600 miles (5 790 kilometres).

Crews practiced reeling a mock-up spacecraft into the stern of the USS Anchorage.

Mark Geyer, Nasa's program manager for the Orion, says the December mission will test the space capsule for an unmanned mission planned for 2017.

Geyer says that if all goes well, a 2021 mission will bring four astronauts to orbit the moon and a mission in the 2030s will bring humans to Mars. - Sapa-AP

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