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The George C. Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) is a lead NASA center for propulsion, Space Shuttle propulsion, external fuel tank, crew training and payloads, International Space Station (ISS) design and construction, for computers, networks, and information management. Located on the Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Alabama and named in honor of General George Marshall, the center also contains one of the Shuttle mission operation centers known as the HOSC where some mission and pre-missions operations are controlled.

The Huntsville Operations Support Center (HOSC) is a facility which supports Space Shuttle launch activities at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The HOSC also monitors rocket launches from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station when a Marshall Center payload is on board.

Historical projects include the Hermes, an early U.S. adaptation of the German V-2, the Jupiter-C, used to launch the Explorer I satellite, the Redstone rocket, the ABMA/AOMC to NASA transition vehicle used in the ballistic missile program and the Mercury space program, the Juno, the Atlas, with the US Air Force used in the ballistic missile program and the Mercury and Gemini space program, the Titan, also used for Gemini, the Saturn series (I-V), used in the Apollo and Skylab programs. Modern boosters include the Space Shuttle liquid and solid propellant engines and the Delta series, used in satellite and Mars mission launches.

Many vestiges of the early programs are still visible around the center, including engine test stands, several of which are shown in the photo to the right.

See also


External links


NASA facilities | Lockheed Martin

Marshall Space Flight Center | George C. Marshall Space Flight Center | Marshall Space Flight Center

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Marshall Space Flight Center".

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