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Engine problem delays rocket to Moon

An engine-cooling problem has forced NASA to postpone for at least four days the debut test launch of the colossal new rocket ship it plans to use for future astronaut flights back to the moon.

Aug 30, 2022, updated Aug 30, 2022
Photo: AP/Brynn Anderson

Photo: AP/Brynn Anderson

The space agency declined to set a precise time frame for retrying a launch of the mission, dubbed Artemis I.

But a second attempt was still possible as early as Friday, depending on the outcome of further data analysis, senior NASA officials told a news briefing hours after the aborted countdown.

If engineers can resolve the issue on the launch pad in the next 48 to 72 hours, “Friday is definitely in play,” Michael Sarafin, NASA’s Artemis mission manager told reporters.

The planned journey marks the kick-off of NASA’s highly vaunted moon-to-Mars Artemis program, the successor to the Apollo lunar missions of the 1960s and 70s, and the first voyage of both the Space Launch Vehicle (SLS) rocket and its Orion astronaut capsule.

The mission calls for a six-week, uncrewed test flight of the Orion capsule around the moon and back to earth for a splashdown in the Pacific.

The malfunction on Monday surfaced as the rocket’s fuel tanks were being filled with super-cooled liquid oxygen and hydrogen propellants at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida.

Launch teams had begun a “conditioning” process to chill the four main SLS engines sufficiently but one engine failed to cool down as expected, NASA said.

The flight was called off two minutes after the targeted launch time.

Late-hour launch postponements are routine in the space business and Monday’s was not in itself an immediate indication of a major setback for NASA or its primary contractors, Boeing Co for SLS and Lockheed Martin Corp for Orion.

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“We don’t launch until it’s right,” NASA chief Bill Nelson said in a webcast interview after lift-off was scrubbed.

“This is a very complicated machine, a very complicated system, and all those things have to work. And you don’t want to light the candle until it’s ready to go.”

The voyage is intended to put the vehicle through its paces in a rigorous demonstration flight, pushing its design limits, before NASA deems it reliable enough to carry astronauts in a subsequent flight targeted for 2024.

Billed as the most powerful, complex rocket in the world, the SLS represents the biggest new vertical launch system the US space agency has built since the Saturn V rocket flown during Apollo, which grew out of the US-Soviet space race of the Cold War era.

Due to the complexity of the issue that emerged on Monday and constraints on how long a rocket is permitted to remain at a launch tower before blast-off, the spacecraft could end up being rolled back to its vehicle assembly building if trouble-shooting and repairs drag on for too long.

Such a move would involve a more extended delay than a few days or a week.

But NASA officials said they were not ready to make that call yet.

If the first two Artemis missions succeed, NASA is aiming to land astronauts back on the moon, including the first woman to set foot on the lunar surface, as early as 2025, although many experts believe that time frame is likely to slip by a few years.

The last humans to walk on the moon were the two-man descent team of Apollo 17 in 1972, following in the footsteps of 10 other astronauts during five earlier missions beginning with Apollo 11 in 1969.

-AAP

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