NASA paraded its megarocket to the launchpad in Cape Canaveral,Beauty Salon Special Service 4 Florida, on Thursday evening, and not just for a flashy photo-op a la the Oscars red carpet.
The U.S. space agency is readying the 5.75 million-pound behemoth for a mission to the moon, known as Artemis I. It's the first in a series of deep space exploration voyages that could lift off as early as May. The upcoming launch won't include astronauts, but the flight will prepare NASA to send a crew on the next, more complex mission, Artemis II.
At its Kennedy Space Center launchpad, the fully assembled rocket, known as the Space Launch System, with the Orion spacecraft on top, will undergo a so-called "wet dress rehearsal" because the crucial test involves filling the rocket with liquid fuel. Only after successfully completing this loading and countdown simulation will NASA set a date for the first lunar mission, agency leaders say.
The star of NASA's megarocket reveal isn't the big rocket
A little-known U.S. spaceport shoots into the big rocket scene
China landed on the moon and found water in dirt and rocks
NASA waited 50 years to unseal these precious moon rocks
The redeye rollout of the 322-foot rocket began at 5 p.m. ET and continued through nightfall. It arrived at the launch site at about 4 a.m. ET Friday. Eventually, the wet dress rehearsal will begin on April 3 and occur over two days.
Wheeling out the rocket was a grander display than the last time NASA showcased its largest rocket. When the agency hauled the (now retired) Space Shuttle to the launch pad, the team transported it under the cover of darkness at midnight, Mike Bolger, exploration ground systems program manager, said during a call with reporters in February.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Since then, the agency has perhaps learned a lesson in public relations, taking advantage of a spectacular Space Coast sunset for the road trip, which will creep at speeds less than 1 mph.
"This is a very different vehicle than what we normally see here in Florida," said Tom Whitmeyer, associate administrator for exploration systems development, in a press briefing on Monday. "There hasn't been something like this for quite some time."
What makes this rocket stand out (pun intended) is its imposing, colossal height. The megarocket towers above the Statue of Liberty and London's Big Ben, comparable in size to Saturn V, the rocket used for the Apollo missions.
"It just catches your breath."
"It just catches your breath," Whitmeyer said.
The journey from storage to launchpad is about four miles — some might say the longest four miles of NASA engineers' lives. It will take around 11 hours for the megarocket to lumber down the path on a crawler transporter, a more than 50-year-old machine reminiscent of a Star Warsmobile desert fortress.
Once the rocket is docked at the launch pad, the team will connect the mobile launcher to utilities, such as water for fire suppression, power, and air. The next step is a meeting to assess the health and status of the rocket and Orion spacecraft. Lastly, the team will load the core and upper stages of the rocket with propellant, liquid hydrogen, and liquid oxygen.
The wet dress rehearsal allows the team to practice fueling and walking through a countdown. If you get fidgety at the gas station, consider this: Filling the tanks of the megarocket will take about eight hours. By comparison, the Space Shuttle only took 2.5 hours.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
NASA engineers will also practice a "scrub." A so-called "scrub" is aeronautics-speak for a cancellation. In theory, the space agency can call off a launch right down to the wire for foul weather, temperature, mechanical failures, or a litany of other problems. Back in the Space Shuttle days, a launch was once delayed because a woodpecker poked over 200 holes in an external fuel tank.
After filling'er up, the NASA team will practice a launch countdown, stopping with just 10 seconds remaining. Then, they'll rehearse resetting the countdown clock to 10 minutes before takeoff. The tests will conclude with draining the fuel from the rocket.
"The next time when we roll, when we actually roll out for launch, we'll refer to that four-mile trip as the first four miles of NASA's return to the moon," Bolger said.
UPDATE: Mar. 18, 2022, 10:30 a.m. EDT NASA's Space Launch System rocket successfully arrived at Launch Complex 39B at the Kennedy Space Center.
The Morning News Roundup for August 14, 2014iPhone 15 Pro rumor says 'Gold' is out, 'Titan Gray' is inSpaceX discrimination lawsuit: Refugees, asylees wrongly rejectedWalmart is expanding drone delivery servicesThis Week’s Staff Picks: Moo, Maine, MalfeasanceTech billionaires are buying up land near San Francisco to build their own utopiaHow literary fiction is grappling with modern techCover Art by Sadie SteinAsk Questions LaterThe Morning News Roundup for August 20, 2014'Did it hurt' memes are hilarious, painful, and taking over the internetWhere Are Hegel and Virginia Woolf Now?Mars spacecraft takes new images of biggest volcano in solar systemField of DreamsOneiric Architecture and Opium by Chantal McStayThe Morning News Roundup for August 15, 2014Vaccine skeptic Joe Rogan got COVID and then took bogus horse dewormer drugWhere Are They Now? Part OneCover Art by Sadie SteinHow to unblock someone on Facebook Anagramming the News: Can You Solve These 25 Puzzles? Timbuktu’s Massive Book Heist Waterworks: The Original Robots Bob Adelman, Civil Rights Photographer, Dead at Eighty Summing Up: A poem by Claribel Alegria Need a Mirror? You’re in Luck: They’re Everywhere The Joys of Eating a Hot Dog Standing up at the Airport Last Chance: Subscribe to The Paris Review and Lucky Peach The Joys of the Flea Market Didn’t This Used to be Easier? The Nostalgia of Constipation Just a Taste: The Photographer’s Cookbook The Single Girl’s Guide to Art Babies in Art Mostly Look Nothing Like Babies in Life Before ASCII Art, There Was … This 19th Four Episodes in the Life of Einstein’s Mother Having Trouble Sleeping? Read This Extremely Boring Writing… Marisol, the Mononymic Sculptor, Is Dead at Eighty Lisa Hanawalt: Hot Dog Taste Test Title Fights: Who Gets to Name an Author’s Book? Bears, Abortion, Mechanical Pencils—All at the County Fair
1.7374s , 10136.4609375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Beauty Salon Special Service 4】,Miracle Information Network