Northrop Grumman has shipped the final eight twin solid rocket booster motor segments for NASA's Artemis III mission to Kennedy Space Center in Florida, completing the set of booster hardware destined for that flight. The segments will be stacked on the vehicle at the launch site during the summer months.
These latest deliveries complement booster segments that Northrop Grumman shipped in April. Together, the full complement of segments will form the first hardware to be assembled on the mission's mobile launch platform. The company notes that its solid rocket boosters produce 7.2 million pounds of thrust at lift-off.
The solid rocket boosters are a principal source of thrust for NASA's Space Launch System on Artemis III. That mission will transport astronauts and critical cargo aboard the Orion spacecraft to conduct rendezvous operations in low-Earth orbit with human landing systems, as part of preparations for sustained lunar exploration and eventual missions to Mars.
Northrop Grumman emphasizes it has facilities and a workforce structured to accelerate production of solid rocket motors. The company states its objective is to meet NASA's increased Artemis mission launch cadence while also supporting national security and broader space exploration goals. With this shipment, Northrop Grumman characterizes the booster segments as the final delivery for Artemis III mission hardware.
Operational context
The delivered segments complete the booster hardware package for Artemis III and will be integrated at Kennedy Space Center this summer. The booster segments are intended to provide much of the lift capability required for the Space Launch System during the mission's ascent phase.
Program and production notes
Northrop Grumman has framed the deliveries as part of a broader effort to align production capacity with NASA's increased mission tempo. The company points to its ability to scale solid rocket motor production through its existing facilities and personnel to support both exploration and national security objectives.