Artemis I, the first in a series of increasingly complex NASA missions aimed at making human exploration of the moon and Mars possible, is not ready to shoot for the stars just yet.
The mission was scheduled for a "wet dress rehearsal" this weekend to allow NASA teams to simulate launch procedures without actually igniting the rocket and sending it into space.
On Sunday, NASA announced that the 5.75-million-pound craft was struggling to pressurize its mobile launcher. That process is crucial to keeping hazardous gases from disturbing the rocket as it is pumped full of 700,000 gallons of cryogenic fuel.
In a media briefing Sunday evening, Launch Director Charlie Blackwell-Thompson and Mission Manager Michael Serafin said they were confident that a fix could be implemented in time to resume tanking operations Monday morning, April 4.
"The team is prepared for this," assured Artemis Mission Manager Michael Serafin, "They've demonstrated incredible discipline and toughness and I'm confident we're going to get there soon. [We] just need to get the time to do that."
Despite four confirmed lightning strikes, things were looking good for the mission as of Sunday morning. Though running an hour behind schedule, teams were approved to begin tanking the rocket once meteorologists confirmed that there were no weather violations.
Blackwell-Thompson and Serafin confirmed that the lightning strikes had no connection to the malfunctioning of the fans used to pressurize the mobile launcher.
An official launch date for Artemis I has not been scheduled and is dependent on the success of this dress rehearsal. A lot is riding on this mission, as the rocket is reportedly the most expensive ever built.
There are no astronauts aboard Artemis I, but its launch will prepare NASA to send a human crew into space on the more complex follow-up mission Artemis II.
文章
53
浏览
73
获赞
15
HBO Max vs. HBO Go and HBO Now: What makes each service different
There are now three streaming services with HBO's name on them. Wednesday marked the official launchGolden Corral finally admits data breach. Here’s what got exposed.
A popular U.S. dining institution ran into some data security problems last summer.In a press releasWhy are people watching therapy and therapist porn?
Have you ever had the hots for your therapist? Or, if not a crush on your actual therapist, maybe yoAmazon Big Spring Sale Bluetooth speaker deals: Bose, JBL, and more
UPDATE: Mar. 19, 2024, 2:00 p.m. EDT This article has been updated with the latest Bluetooth speakerWhy Google Maps might lose EV owners to Apple Maps (seriously)
After WWDC, electric car owners might want to consider Apple Maps over Google Maps.In iOS 14, AppleiOS 17.5 beta 1 is here: 3 new features coming to your iPhone
Apple released iOS 17.5 beta 1 for developers on Tuesday, allowing them to test some new features inMillions of passcodes are reset after massive AT&T data leak
If I had to rank leaks, I'd say a leaky faucet is the second worst leak, bested only by the most devAmazon Big Spring Sale laptop deal: Get an Acer Aspire 3 for just $257
UPDATE: Mar. 22, 2024, 11:40 a.m. EDT The Acer Aspire 3 (AMD Ryzen 3 7320U, 8GB RAM, 128GB SSD)is noEU is investigating Apple Pay and App Store for breaking competition rules
The European Commission has launched two formal investigations into Apple's business practices overTaylor Swift made it to the Super Bowl, and Ice Spice is with her
The biggest question dominating the internet is whether or not the world's most famous pop star, Tay8 wild Sora AI videos generated by the new OpenAI tool you need to see
OpenAI just announced Sora, an AI model for generating videos. They look exactly how you think theyTikTok is mostly full of lurkers, study finds
There are more lurkers than creators on TikTok, a recent Pew Research Center study has found. The faHere's that creepy Rami Malek ad mashed with music from Jordan Peele's 'Us'
It's been an entire month since Rami Malek's promotional video for Mandarin Oriental hotels made theThe AirPods Pro are back down to a record low price
Save $60: As of March 11, the AirPods Pro are down to a record low price of $189 at Walmart —I used AI to plan my Costa Rica trip — why I'll never use it again
In a world filled with AI skeptics, I'm cautiously optimistic about the proliferation of artificial