NASA Artemis I Moon Rocket Endures Hurricane-Force Winds Ahead of Launch, Minor Damage Detected

NASA’s new $4 billion (roughly Rs. 32,280 crore) moon rocket endured fierce winds and heavy rains early Thursday as it rode out Hurricane Nicole on its Florida launchpad, apparently with only minor damage, according to an early NASA inspection in the storm’s aftermath.

Sustained winds of 85 miles per hour (136.8km per hour) were measured by launch-site sensors hundreds of feet above the ground, with gusts topping 100 mph, testing the design limits of the 32-story-tall rocket and posing added risks to a spacecraft already beset by technical glitches that have delayed its debut launch.

NASA’s wind sensor readings are made available to the public by the US National Weather Service online. The rocket is designed to withstand exposure on the launchpad to winds of up 85mph, US space agency officials said before the storm.

In a brief message posted on Twitter by NASA Associate Administrator Jim Free, the agency acknowledged wind sensor readings from 60 feet high of gusts peaking at 82mph.

The National Hurricane Center in Miami reported Nicole’s maximum sustained wind speeds on the ground at 75mph, with higher gusts, when it made landfall before dawn on Thursday south of the Kennedy Space Center launch site in Cape Canaveral.

Rather than trying to roll the massive Space Launch System (SLS) rocket back to its hangar before the hurricane struck, NASA had opted to batten down the vehicle at the launchpad where it arrived last week prior to Nicole’s emerging in the forecast as a tropical storm.

The SLS and its Orion capsule were being prepared for a third launch attempt – following two aborted countdowns in late summer – that would mark their highly anticipated first flight and the inaugural mission of NASA’s Artemis lunar exploration program.

NASA engineers reasoned that attempting to transport the massive rocket, a 12-hour undertaking, in high winds as the storm was approaching was too risky.

“Camera inspections show very minor damage such as loose caulk and tears in weather coverings,” Free, who oversees much of the agency’s Artemis program, tweeted Thursday afternoon. “The team will conduct additional onsite walk-down inspections of the vehicle soon.”

NASA rolled out SLS to its launchpad last Thursday for a planned November 14 liftoff, aiming to conduct a much-delayed debut test flight toward the moon without any humans aboard.

“Even at that point, there was always a concern that somewhere out in the Caribbean would be a favored area for at least some development of a tropical system,” said Mark Burger, launch weather officer at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station’s 45th Weather Squadron.

“Of course, nothing was out there at the time, so you can only go with the probabilistic aspect,” he added.

Nicole took shape as a potential tropical storm as SLS arrived at the pad, roughly 4 miles from where it had been stored inside NASA’s Vehicle Assembly Building. NASA on Tuesday postponed the rocket’s target launch date to November 16, when weather officers predicted Nicole would grow into a hurricane.

A NASA spokesperson said Thursday the agency has not ruled out a November 16 launch, but added, “It is premature to confirm the launch date while we have just started to get personnel out for walk-down inspections.”

© Thomson Reuters 2022


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NASA Artemis I SLS-Orion Spacecraft Launch Halted Due to Engine Bleed Issue: All Details

NASA announced on Monday that its Artemis I SLS-Orion Spacecraft launch has been halted due to an issue with one of the rocket’s engines. Minutes after the spacecraft was scheduled to blast off from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida earlier today, the US space agency explained that the launch of Artemis I — NASA’s first step towards putting humans back on the Moon — had been scrubbed. Meanwhile the next launch date will be announced at a later stage, according to NASA.

The Artemis I launch director halted the attempt to launch Artemis I on Monday at 8:34am EDT (6:04pm IST), NASA communications specialist Rachel Kraft said in a post on the space agency’s blog. According to NASA, both the Orion spacecraft, which is designed to carry astronauts to the Moon in the future, and the advanced Space Launch System (SLS) remained in a safe and stable configuration at the time the launch was halted. 

“Launch controllers were continuing to evaluate why a bleed test to get the RS-25 engines on the bottom of the core stage to the proper temperature range for liftoff was not successful, and ran out of time in the two-hour launch window. Engineers are continuing to gather additional data,” the space agency explained.

“We don’t launch until it’s right,” NASA Administrator Bill Nelson stated in a briefing, explaining the engine bleed issue affecting one of the engines. “You can’t go, there are certain guidelines. And I think it’s just illustrative that this is a very complicated machine, a very complicated system and all those things have to work. And you don’t want to light the candle, until it’s ready to go,” he added.

“We are stressing and testing this rocket and the spacecraft in a way that you would never do it with a human crew onboard. That’s the purpose of a test flight,” Nelson explained. 

NASA is expected to announce the next Artemis I launch date in the future, after the issues with the engine are resolved. The US space agency had previously set backup launch dates on September 2 and September 5 for the Artemis I launch, but it is currently unclear if the rocket will be ready for launch by that date. 


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NASA Announces Potential August Launch Date for Artemis 1 Moon Mission Aboard SLS Rocket

On the 53rd anniversary of the Apollo 11 lunar landing, NASA announced on Wednesday that it’s shooting for a late August launch of its giant, new moon rocket.

NASA will attempt the more than month-long lunar test flight with three mannequins, but no astronauts, as early as August 29. There are also two launch dates in early September, before NASA would have to stand down for two weeks.

NASA’s Jim Free noted the test flight begins “our Artemis program to go back to the moon.” The space agency’s new lunar program is named Artemis after Apollo‘s twin sister in Greek mythology.

The 30-story Space Launch System rocket and attached Orion capsule are currently in the hangar at Kennedy Space Center, following repairs stemming from last month’s countdown test. Fuel leaks and other technical trouble cropped up during NASA’s repeated launch rehearsals at the pad.

NASA officials assured reporters Wednesday that the problems have been resolved and that testing is almost complete. But they cautioned the launch dates could slip, depending on the volatile Florida weather and issues that might arise before the rocket is supposed to return to the pad on August 18.

“We’re going to be careful,” said Free, head of exploration systems development.

At 322 feet (98 meters), the rocket and Orion capsule are taller than the Statue of Liberty.

If Orion’s trip to the moon and back goes well, astronauts could climb aboard in 2023 for a lunar loop-around and actually land in 2025.

Astronauts last explored the moon in 1972. The first of the 12 moonwalkers, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, stepped onto the dusty gray surface on July 20, 1969, while Michael Collins orbited the moon.

The 92-year-old Aldrin, the sole survivor of the three, noted the anniversary in a tweet. He stated, “Neil, Michael & I were proud to represent America as we took those giant leaps for mankind. It was a moment which united the world and America’s finest hour.”



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