Hurricane threat prompts NASA to delay next launch attempt of moon
rocket
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[November 09, 2022]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - NASA will batten down its big
new moon rocket on the launch pad to ride out a hurricane expected to
hit near Cape Canaveral, Florida, and its targeted liftoff time next
week has been postponed by two days, the U.S. space agency said on
Monday.
Kennedy Space Center lies near the middle of a 240-mile stretch of
Florida's Atlantic shore, where forecasters say Tropical Storm Nicole is
most likely to strike Wednesday night or early Thursday as a category 1
hurricane.
As of Tuesday night, Nicole was packing maximum sustained winds of 65
miles per hour (100 kph) and gaining force as it headed for the northern
Bahamas en route to Florida, the Miami-based National Hurricane Center
reported.
A category 1 hurricane has top sustained winds of 74-95 mph (119-153 kph).
NASA's next-generation rocket, standing 32 stories tall, was rolled out
to its launch pad last week for what would be a third attempt to get it
off the ground for its inaugural, uncrewed flight to the moon and back.
The flight, marking the first mission of NASA's ambitious new Artemis
lunar exploration program, had been set for liftoff next Monday.
Nicole's approach prompted NASA to delay that launch window by at least
two days, to Wednesday, Nov. 16, giving workers extra time to tend to
families and homes before the storm and to ready the rocket for flight
afterward.
NASA said it would keep the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion
capsule moored to the launch pad through the storm rather than try to
roll the spacecraft back to its hangar - a nearly 12-hour undertaking
that entails additional risks.
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Tourists take pictures of a NASA sign at
the Kennedy Space Center visitors complex in Cape Canaveral, Florida
April 14, 2010. REUTERS/Carlos Barria/File Photo
If the giant tractor crawler used to transport the rocket to and
from its hangar were to break down, the spacecraft could be left
more vulnerable, said Mark Burger, a launch weather officer for the
Cape's U.S. Space Force Station.
"It could be many hours of sitting out on the crawlerway exposed to
the forces from the wind, and that would be the absolutely worst
scenario," Burger told Reuters.
The rocket was built to withstand exposure to heavy rains and winds
as high as 85 mph, at the upper limit forecast at the Cape, NASA
said.
In preparation for the storm, teams powered down the spacecraft's
systems and took measures to secure the rocket and other equipment
at the site. A "ride-out" team was assigned to stay at the complex
and monitor conditions during the storm.
Two previous Artemis I launch attempts on Aug. 29 and Sept. 3 were
aborted because of technical problems, and the rocket was moved back
to its hangar because of Hurricane Ian.
If Artemis I gets off the ground on Nov. 16, during a two-hour
launch window that opens at 1 a.m. EST (0600 GMT), the Orion capsule
would return to Earth for splashdown on Dec. 11, NASA said. A backup
launch date was set for Nov. 19.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Additional reporting by
Joey Roulette in Washington. Editing by Gerry Doyle)
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