Known as the "wet dress rehearsal,"
it is the final major test before the Artemis I mission this summer: an
uncrewed lunar flight that will eventually be followed by boots on the ground,
likely no sooner than 2026.
"The countdown is now underway,"
NASA said in its Artemis blog at 5:00pm Eastern Time (21:00 GMT), confirming
members of the launch control team had been issued their "call to
stations."
Data from the test, which ends Sunday
mid-afternoon, will be used to finalise a launch date for Artemis I. NASA had
said May could be the first window, but later now seems likely.
It is called a "wet" dress
rehearsal because supercooled liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen will be loaded
into SLS from ground systems, just as they would be in a real launch.
The 322-foot (98-meter) rocket —expected to
be the most powerful in history at the time it is operational — was rolled out
to Launch Complex 39B at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida around two weeks
ago.
Teams are now filling up a sound
suppression system with water that is used to dampen acoustic energy during
lift-off. They will continue to practice every operation that would be carried
out in a real launch.
Come Sunday morning, with the SLS rocket
and Orion crew capsule fixed atop both powered on, they will load up 700,000
gallons (2.6 million litres) of propellant.
They won't actually ignite the rocket's
RS-25 engines, which were tested previously. Instead, they will halt the
countdown about 10 seconds before liftoff, in order to simulate a
"scrub," when launch is aborted due to technical or weather related
issues.
The fuel will be drained, and a few days
later SLS and Orion will be rolled back to the vehicle assembly building to
carry out checks on how everything went.
Test milestones will be posted on NASA's
blog for the Artemis mission, and the public might be able to glimpse the
rocket venting vapour on the launch pad on April 3, during tanking operations,
on the agency's YouTube channel.
On Monday, agency officials plan to hold a
press conference to give further information. NASA won't however let the public
listen to live internal audio.
Senior NASA official Tom Whitmeyer
explained this was because certain key information, including timing sequences,
could assist other countries looking to develop long-range missiles, and fall
foul of export control regulations called International Traffic in Arms
Regulations (ITAR).
"We're really, really super sensitive
to cryogenic launch vehicles that are of this size and capability, (and) are
very analogous to ballistic type capabilities that other countries are very
interested in," he said, but added that the agency could re-evaluate the
position in future.
The decision has caused some confusion, as
commercial launch companies routinely make their countdown audio available,
while most intercontinental ballistic missiles run on solid fuel, not liquid
propellants.
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