Top NASA leaders visit Stennis Space Center

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Image above: NASA Administrator Bill Nelson (l) and NASA Deputy Administrator Pam Melroy speak to media during the officials’ visit to Stennis Space Center on Dec. 7. Nelson and Melroy both praised Stennis as a “national treasure” during their visit with media at the Aerojet Rocketdyne Engine Assembly Facility on-site. (Credits: NASA/SSC)


NASA Deputy Administrator Pam Melroy stands in front of an RS-25 engine (Credits: NASA/SSC)

NASA Administrator Bill Nelson and Deputy Administrator Pam Melroy visited Stennis Space Center on Dec. 7, meeting with Stennis Director Rick Gilbrech and other site leaders, and also touring various center facilities.

The leaders toured the Fred Haise Test Stand, B-2 Test Stand, and E Test Complex, as well as the Aerojet Rocketdyne Engine Assembly Facility.

Nelson and Melroy both praised Stennis as a “national treasure,” noting the key role the center is playing in the agency’s Artemis plans to return humans, including the first woman and first person of color to the Moon in preparation for eventual missions to Mars.

Stennis is testing RS-25 engines that will help power NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS) rocket on deep space missions. Earlier this year, the site also tested the first SLS core stage prior to its upcoming Artemis I launch.

“This is an exciting point in our nation’s space history, and a lot of it is happening right here (at Stennis),” Nelson said as he and Melroy visited with media in front of an RS-25 engine at the Aerojet Rocketdyne facility. “Come February, engines like this are going to roar to life, and we’re going back to the Moon.”

Apollo 13 astronaut Fred Haise, a native of Biloxi, Miss. (center), visits with NASA Administrator Bill Nelson (r) and NASA Deputy Administrator Pam Melroy. (Credits: NASA/SSC)

To close the day, the leaders participated in a ceremony commemorating the March 2020 designation of the A-1 Test Stand at Stennis as the Fred Haise Test Stand. The designation honors Haise, a Biloxi, Mississippi, native, who served as the lunar module pilot on the famed Apollo 13 mission in 1970 and has been a steadfast supporter of the American space program, NASA, Stennis, and the INFINITY Science Center.

During the ceremony, Nelson and others praised Haise as a true American hero. “As long as humans dream of the stars, as long as this nation reaches beyond its bounds, as long as astronauts dare to go, they will dream and reach and go in the shadow of pioneers like Fred W. Haise,” Gilbrech noted.

The visit marked Nelson’s first trip to Stennis since he became NASA administrator in late April.

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