Home Science Public invited to watch solid rocket motors arrive for shuttle Endeavour exhibit in L.A.

Public invited to watch solid rocket motors arrive for shuttle Endeavour exhibit in L.A.

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Public invited to watch solid rocket motors arrive for shuttle Endeavour exhibit in L.A.

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The California Science Center is celebrating the anniversary of space shuttle Endeavour’s iconic Los Angeles road trip with the delivery of two very large candles.

On Wednesday (Oct. 11), 11 years to the day after the NASA winged orbiter began the ground-based leg of its journey to go on display, two flight-worthy solid rocket motors (SRMs) will arrive at the science center to stand with Endeavour in a vertical, ready for launch configuration. The public is invited to watch as the pair of 116-foot-long (35 meters) motors are carried by truck to Exposition Park.

“Eleven years after Endeavour’s memorable crosstown journey, we’re delighted to invite the public to join us once again to be a part of this next historic arrival,” said Jeffrey Rudolph, president and chief executive officer of the California Science Center, in a statement. “The arrival of the SRMs will propel us one step closer to the completion of the future Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center, which will serve as a launchpad for creativity and innovation and will inspire future generations of scientists, engineers and explorers.”

The SRMs comprise the largest part of the solid rocket boosters (SRBs). During the 30-year space shuttle program, twin 15-story-tall, reusable SRBs would fire in tandem with the shuttle’s three main engines to produce more than six million pounds of thrust, the majority of what was needed to lift off the launch pad. After burnout, the two boosters were jettisoned and descended under parachutes to an ocean splashdown to be recovered, refurbished and reused.

Related: NASA’s space shuttle program in pictures: A tribute

Artist rendering of the space shuttle Endeavour inside the California Science Center’s Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center. (Image credit: California Science Center)

Donated by Northrop Grumman, the two SRMs include hardware that was part of 81 space shuttle missions. The oldest cases, located at the top of each assembled solid rocket motor, helped launch STS-5, the fifth flight of the program and the orbiter Columbia, in 1982. The most recent use was for STS-123, the 21st launch of Endeavour, in 2008.

The SRMs have been in storage at the Mojave Air and Space Port, about 100 miles (160 kilometers) north of Los Angeles, since September 2020. They are the final elements of space shuttle Endeavour’s stack to arrive at the California Science Center. The components, including NASA’s last remaining built-for-flight external tank, will make up the world’s only exhibit of an authentic shuttle poised for flight.

The SRMs’ route to the science center will be mostly by freeway until the last leg of their trip. After exiting the California Freeway (Route 110) the morning of Oct. 11, the motors will travel on flatbed trucks northbound along Figueroa Street beginning at 7:30 a.m. PDT (10:30 a.m. EDT or 1430 GMT) from 43rd Place to Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard. At 8:00 a.m. PDT (11:00 a.m. EDT or 1500 GMT), the SRMs will pause at Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard before a ceremonial “finish line” at 39th Street 45 minutes later.

The public may gather along Figueroa Street from 43rd Place to 39th Street to join in the celebration and watch the SRMs arrive until 9:00 a.m. local time. This will be the best opportunity for the public to see any stage of the “Go for Stack” process in person, due to safety precautions and space constraints around the Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center construction site.

Related: Where are NASA’s space shuttles now?

The public may gather along Figueroa Street from 43rd Place to 39th Street in Los Angeles to watch the solid rocket motors arrive at the California Science Center on Oct. 11, 2023. (Image credit: Google Maps)



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