Friday, August 12, 2022
Only 6 DAYS Before the Space Launch System Returns to Kennedy Space Center's Launch Complex 39B for Flight...
NASA
Teams Work Final Preparations for Rollout of Artemis I Moon Rocket (News Release)
Engineers are conducting the last integrated test before the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion spacecraft roll out to Launch Complex 39B next week for the launch of the Artemis I flight test. This week, teams began the second part of the flight termination system (FTS) test. The first part of the test was conducted earlier this year prior to the wet dress rehearsal.
For safety purposes, all rockets are required to have a system that the Space Launch Delta 45 can use to terminate the flight if necessary. Following completion of the FTS testing, the Eastern Range requires SLS to launch within a certain timeframe. In order to meet the August 29 launch attempt and backup attempts on September 2 and 5, NASA has received an extension from the Space Launch Delta 45 on the validation of the FTS from 20 to 25 days before the system would need to be retested. The waiver will be valid throughout the Artemis I launch attempts.
Once the flight termination system testing is complete, teams will complete final closeouts on SLS and Orion before it rolls out of the Vehicle Assembly Building, including closing out the core stage and solid rocket boosters and retracting the remaining access platforms. The Orion crew module and launch abort system hatches were closed earlier this week, and Orion is in the final preparations for roll.
The Matroshka AstroRad Radiation Experiment torsos, Helga and Zohar, outfitted with sensors to measure radiation levels future crews will be exposed to, have joined Commander Campos and are now installed inside the Orion spacecraft. The final payloads, including the agency’s Biology Experiment-1, will be installed once the rocket and spacecraft are at the pad for launch.
The agency is targeting Thursday, August 18 to roll SLS and the Orion spacecraft to the spaceport’s Launch Complex 39B, and will provide a live stream beginning at 6 p.m. EDT Wednesday, August 17 on the NASA Kennedy YouTube channel.
Source: NASA.Gov
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NASA
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