Space Launch System

Technology

Last mentioned: Mar 20, 2026

Timeline

  1. Artemis I Success

    Uncrewed Orion spacecraft completes 25-day mission around the Moon.

  2. Artemis I Success

    Uncrewed SLS and Orion mission successfully completes lunar orbit.

  3. Artemis I Success

    Uncrewed SLS and Orion mission successfully orbits the Moon and returns to Earth.

  4. Target Launch

    Scheduled liftoff for the first crewed lunar mission in over 50 years.

  5. VAB Rollback

    Planned return to the Vehicle Assembly Building for hardware repairs.

  6. Second Delay

    Mission timeline moves to April 2026 due to Orion heat shield and life support issues.

  7. First Major Delay

    NASA pushes Artemis II from late 2024 to September 2025 citing safety concerns.

  8. Malfunction Detected

    Helium system failure identified during launch pad preparations.

  9. Current Delay

    New repairs identified for the SLS rocket core stage, delaying the mission indefinitely.

  10. Final Integration

    Orion spacecraft and SLS rocket undergo final stacking and testing at KSC.

  11. Crew Announcement

    NASA and CSA name the four astronauts assigned to the Artemis II mission.

  12. New Launch Target

    NASA aims for a revised launch window for the crewed lunar flyby.

  13. Target Launch

    Earliest projected launch window for the Artemis II lunar mission.

  14. Pad Arrival

    The SLS/Orion stack successfully reaches Launch Pad 39B.

  15. VAB Repairs

    Engineers complete final maintenance on Orion life support components.

  16. Rollout Delay

    High winds at Kennedy Space Center prevent the SLS from moving to the pad.

Stories mentioning Space Launch System 4

Launches Neutral

NASA Artemis II Crew Prepares for Lunar Launch Following Technical Repairs

NASA has returned the Artemis II Space Launch System (SLS) rocket to the launch pad after addressing technical issues and weather-related delays. This mission, the first crewed lunar flight in over 50 years, is now targeting an early April liftoff following a successful rollout from the Vehicle Assembly Building.

2 sources
Launches Bearish

NASA Delays Artemis II to April Following Helium System Malfunction

NASA has officially postponed the Artemis II crewed lunar mission to April 2026 after a malfunction was detected in the rocket's helium system. The Space Launch System (SLS) stack must be rolled back to the Vehicle Assembly Building for repairs, marking a significant setback for the lunar program's timeline.

2 sources
Launches Bearish

NASA Delays Artemis II Mission Again Citing Critical SLS Rocket Repairs

NASA has officially postponed the Artemis II crewed lunar flyby mission, the first human-crewed flight of the Space Launch System (SLS), due to newly identified repair requirements on the rocket. This latest setback pushes the mission's timeline further into the late 2020s, complicating the broader goal of returning humans to the lunar surface.

3 sources
Launches Very Bullish

NASA Sets March 6 Launch for Artemis II Crewed Lunar Flyby

NASA has officially targeted March 6 for the launch of Artemis II, the first crewed mission of the Artemis program. The mission will carry four astronauts on a high-speed lunar flyby, marking the first human voyage to the vicinity of the Moon in over half a century.

3 sources

About Space Launch System coverage

This page surfaces every story mentioning Space Launch System across our space & defense coverage. We track each entity's appearance over time so readers can trace how the narrative evolves — which developments are isolated incidents, which build into longer arcs, and which reframe how operators in the space think about the entity. Story selection uses the same multi-source verification gate applied across the rest of our coverage.

Read our editorial methodology for how we identify, deduplicate, and score entity references. Our glossary defines the technical terms used across stories on this page, and our trends index contextualizes individual developments against the longer-running space & defense beat. Cross-entity comparisons live on our compare view.

What you seeWhat it tells you
Story countNumber of distinct stories where Space Launch System was a primary or referenced actor.
Recency clusteringWhether mentions are concentrated in a recent window (a news cycle) or distributed (a sustained arc).
Sentiment distributionAggregate sentiment of the stories mentioning this entity, weighted by impact score.
Cross-niche linksWhen the same entity surfaces in our sibling networks, we link to those views to enrich context.