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At 1 p.m. Thursday, a giant flame shot down the rocket's interior and ignited 1.5 million pounds of propellant
-- a solid chemical mixture the consistency of a pencil eraser -- coating the booster's interior. The blast from the test could be heard for miles and scoured a deep hole in the hillside. Blazing heat turned a layer of sand into a glasslike material. "After witnessing what we just saw, it's pretty easy to become speechless," Alex Priskos, NASA's Ares I first stage manager, said after Thursday's test. Once the test finished, a crowd gathered in a VIP area about a mile away to cheer and congratulate officials from NASA and Alliant. "I can breathe again," Lampton said. "It went like clockwork."
The Ares I first stage is divided into five segments -- each packed with propellant
-- designed to boost a 321-foot-long vehicle and its crew 36 miles into space in about 120 seconds. From there, the rocket would drop away and another engine would take over. During the test, 650 sensors inside the rocket were picking up signals to measure its performance and provide scientists with information about what might need to be tweaked for the next iteration as the model moves toward flight readiness. Researchers will spend weeks analyzing data from Thursday's test. The test of Ares I first stage, under development since 2005, is one of seven scheduled for the motor design. The next is set for June 2010.
[Associated
Press;
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