Blogarchiv
Raumfahrt - Rocket Lab launch pad at Wallops Island ready for liftoff

23.09.2020

WALLOPS ISLAND, Va. — Small satellite maker and launch provider Rocket Lab says its Launch Complex 2 at Wallops Island in Virginia is ready for its first mission.

The company said in a news release that it has successfully completed a “wet dress rehearsal” of the Electron vehicle at Rocket Lab Launch Complex 2 (LC-2) at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport on Wallops Island. 

With this major milestone complete, the Electron launch vehicle, launch team, and the LC-2 pad systems are now ready for Rocket Lab’s first launch from U.S. soil, the company said.

The mission is a dedicated launch for the U.S. Space Force in partnership with the Department of Defense’s Space Test Program and the Space and Missile Systems Center’s Small Launch and Targets Division. 

2eb77364-83c8-4e4f-bb95-de15bb04ebbf-electron-lc-2-wdr-small

The Electron vehicle at Rocket Lab Launch Complex 2 (LC-2) at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport on Wallops Island.
Submitted image by Rocket Lab

The wet dress rehearsal is a crucial final exercise conducted by the launch team to ensure all systems and procedures are working perfectly ahead of launch day, the release said. 

The Electron launch vehicle was rolled out to the pad, raised vertical and filled with high grade kerosene and liquid oxygen to verify fueling procedures as part of the exercise.

The launch team members then flowed through the integrated countdown to T-0 to carry out the same operations they will undertake on launch day. Before a launch window can be set, NASA is conducting the final development and certification of its Autonomous Flight Termination System (AFTS) software for the mission. 

This flight will be the first time an AFTS has been flown from the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport and represents a valuable new capability for the spaceport.

More: SpaceX postpones next Starlink launch from KSC due to recovery weather

Launch Complex 2 supplements Rocket Lab’s existing site, Launch Complex 1 in New Zealand, from which 14 Electron missions have already launched. 

The two launch complexes combined can support more than 130 launch opportunities every year to deliver "unmatched flexibility" for rapid, responsive launch to support a resilient space architecture. 

“Responsive launch is the key to resilience in space and this is what Launch Complex 2 enables,” said Peter Beck, Rocket Lab founder and chief executive. 

More: Rocket Lab rolls out launch vehicle at its Wallops Island complex

More: NASA Wallops: Moon launch, private partnerships drive future after 75 years

“All satellites are vulnerable, be it from accidental or deliberate actions. By operating a proven launch vehicle from two launch sites on opposite sides of the world, Rocket Lab delivers unmatched flexibility and responsiveness for the defense and national security community to quickly replace any disabled satellite. 

“We’re immensely proud to be delivering reliable and flexible launch capability to the U.S. Space Force and the wider defense community as space becomes an increasingly contested domain.”

24efca61-0e3b-4de0-a329-ea9e35f4e64d-electron-at-launch-complex-2

Rocket Lab recently rolled out its Electron launch vehicle to Launch Complex 2 pad at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport on Wallops Island, Virginia, for the first time.
Image courtesy: Rocket Lab

While the launch team carried out this week’s wet dress rehearsal, construction is nearing completion on the Rocket Lab Integration and Control Facility (ICF) within the Wallops Research Park, adjacent to NASA Wallops Flight Facility Main Base. 

The ICF houses a launch control center, state-of-the-art payload integration facilities, and a vehicle integration department that enables the processing of multiple Electron vehicles to support multiple launches in rapid succession. 

Quelle: delmarva now

1705 Views
Raumfahrt+Astronomie-Blog von CENAP 0