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NASA Troubleshooting Leak Ahead Of Moon Mission Launch

During the test, which NASA calls a wet dress rehearsal, teams will practice loading ice-cold fuel into the rocket, conducting a launch countdown

NASA Troubleshooting Leak Ahead Of Moon Mission Launch
Picture used for representational purpose only
Photo: Unsplash

NASA is troubleshooting a fuel line leak during a major test of its moon rocket on Monday. NASA began conducting a fueling test for its Artemis II mission earlier in the day, the agency said, in a key rehearsal that could pave the way to return astronauts to the vicinity of the moon for the first time since 1972.

Engineers fuel the rocket at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida, simulating the major steps the team will perform on launch day.

The goal is to ensure Artemis II's Boeing Co. Space Launch System rocket and its Lockheed Martin Corp. Orion spacecraft can take off on a 10-day journey to fly by the moon and return home. 

During the test, which NASA calls a wet dress rehearsal, teams will practice loading ice-cold fuel into the rocket, conducting a launch countdown and safely removing the propellant. 

Teams have stopped the flow of liquid hydrogen after leak concentrations exceeded allowable limits, and engineers are troubleshooting the issue, NASA said in a statement on its website.  

The earliest opportunity to launch is Feb. 8, but NASA will wait to set an official launch date until the rehearsal is complete.

During the test, the engineering team will stop short of firing up the rocket's engines because the boosters can only ignite once, said Jonathan McDowell, an astrophysicist who recently retired from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.

“The wet dress is not quite the gold standard, but it's as good as you can get given the physical design,” he said.

In development for about a decade and a half, the SLS is over budget and behind schedule. Each launch is expected to cost more than $4 billion. 

Artemis II will be only the second flight for the SLS and Orion, following their debut in 2022 for the uncrewed Artemis I. That first mission required several wet dress rehearsals due to technical issues. 

The crew of NASA's Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and the Canadian Space Agency's Jeremy Hansen will not be present for Monday's rehearsal since they need to quarantine before takeoff. 

Their mission will test Orion's life-support systems before Artemis III launches a crewed lunar landing, a trip planned for no later than 2028.

ALSO READ: Musk's SpaceX Combines With xAI At $1.25 Trillion Valuation

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