After repairing the rocket, the US space agency again attempted a so-called “liquid dress rehearsal” of the space launch mammoth, or SLS, at the launch site in Cape Canaveral, Florida. Although officials hailed the attempt as largely successful, the rehearsal revealed a hydrogen leak and the team was unable to meet all of its test objectives. Tom Whitmeyer, NASA’s deputy managing director, used a mix of transports to characterize where he left the body in its quest to pursue a substantial space exploration program. “We talked about [this test] are pieces of a puzzle and a delicate dance. “We got over the dance and now we are looking at the pieces of the puzzle to decide which pieces we did not get,” he said during a press conference on Tuesday. “We have a very good idea of what the puzzle looks like at this point.” SEE ALSO: NASA prefers this nickname for America’s new lunar rocket The tweet may have been deleted (opens in new tab) NASA wants to use the rocket for Artemis I, the first US lunar mission since the time of Apollo. The huge 75 5.75 million rocket will eventually send the new Orion spacecraft around the moon – without astronauts for the first time – and then launch into the Pacific Ocean. The main purpose of the flight is to show that the capsule can safely enter the Earth’s atmosphere and hit its target in the water before transporting human passengers. It’s been a long time since NASA had a rocket of this size capable of sending heavy payloads and people into deep space. Not only is it built to travel to the moon, but it is expected to one day land the first astronauts on Mars. Officials said they would have to review the test data to determine when the first shipment would begin. When asked directly if August was still on the table, Whitmeyer said they did not know it yet. The tests were intended to practice loading fuel into the rocket tanks and countdown for launch. The plan was to reduce the clock to nine seconds, just before the engines started, but the team stopped at 29 seconds. The tweet may have been deleted (opens in new tab) NASA executives did not clearly define the goals that were not achieved. The team will assess what repairs, if any, may occur at the launch site and whether it needs to drop the 322-foot rocket back into its depot, said launch director Charlie Blackwell-Thompson. Previous wet rocket dress rehearsals this spring revealed bad valves, faulty fans and leaks. NASA drove the rocket back into storage for repairs before training last weekend. Now engineers will weigh the risks of carrying out some additional tests, said John Honeycutt, director of missiles. But he stressed that regardless of the other issues, the public should not worry that the mega moon rocket is not safe. “We will have either a successful launch or a scrub because we already have protection in the system for those goals we did not achieve if they do not work properly on launch day,” he said. The goals that were not achieved are “actually not to make the vehicle safer to fly. In fact they are,” Can we achieve the launch target for the window that is optimal for our mission to the Moon? “ NASA executives, however, were clear about one thing: They said the Orion spacecraft performed quite well during the tests.
title: “The Date Of Launch Of Nasa S Artemis Rocket Is Not Clear After An Incomplete Test " ShowToc: true date: “2022-10-26” author: “Thomas Plata”
After repairing the rocket, the US space agency again attempted a so-called “liquid dress rehearsal” of the space launch mammoth, or SLS, at the launch site in Cape Canaveral, Florida. Although officials hailed the attempt as largely successful, the rehearsal revealed a hydrogen leak and the team was unable to meet all of its test objectives. Tom Whitmeyer, NASA’s deputy managing director, used a mix of transports to characterize where he left the body in its quest to pursue a substantial space exploration program. “We talked about [this test] are pieces of a puzzle and a delicate dance. “We got over the dance and now we are looking at the pieces of the puzzle to decide which pieces we did not get,” he said during a press conference on Tuesday. “We have a very good idea of what the puzzle looks like at this point.” SEE ALSO: NASA prefers this nickname for America’s new lunar rocket The tweet may have been deleted (opens in new tab) NASA wants to use the rocket for Artemis I, the first US lunar mission since the time of Apollo. The huge 75 5.75 million rocket will eventually send the new Orion spacecraft around the moon – without astronauts for the first time – and then launch into the Pacific Ocean. The main purpose of the flight is to show that the capsule can safely enter the Earth’s atmosphere and hit its target in the water before transporting human passengers. It’s been a long time since NASA had a rocket of this size capable of sending heavy payloads and people into deep space. Not only is it built to travel to the moon, but it is expected to one day land the first astronauts on Mars. Officials said they would have to review the test data to determine when the first shipment would begin. When asked directly if August was still on the table, Whitmeyer said they did not know it yet. The tests were intended to practice loading fuel into the rocket tanks and countdown for launch. The plan was to reduce the clock to nine seconds, just before the engines started, but the team stopped at 29 seconds. The tweet may have been deleted (opens in new tab) NASA executives did not clearly define the goals that were not achieved. The team will assess what repairs, if any, may occur at the launch site and whether it needs to drop the 322-foot rocket back into its depot, said launch director Charlie Blackwell-Thompson. Previous wet rocket dress rehearsals this spring revealed bad valves, faulty fans and leaks. NASA drove the rocket back into storage for repairs before training last weekend. Now engineers will weigh the risks of carrying out some additional tests, said John Honeycutt, director of missiles. But he stressed that regardless of the other issues, the public should not worry that the mega moon rocket is not safe. “We will have either a successful launch or a scrub because we already have protection in the system for those goals we did not achieve if they do not work properly on launch day,” he said. The goals that were not achieved are “actually not to make the vehicle safer to fly. In fact they are,” Can we achieve the launch target for the window that is optimal for our mission to the Moon? “ NASA executives, however, were clear about one thing: They said the Orion spacecraft performed quite well during the tests.