San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Rocket problem delays NASA-SpaceX astronaut launch

- By Christian Davenport

NASA announced Saturday that SpaceX’s next mission flying astronauts to the Internatio­nal Space Station will be delayed until early or mid-November after the company experience­d a problem with the first stage of a booster rocket during a recent launch.

In a blog post, the agency said that the extra time would allow “SpaceX to complete hardware testing and data reviews” of an issue with an engine gas generator. NASA said it has “full insight into the company’s launch and testing data.”

“We have a strong working relationsh­ip with our SpaceX partner,” Kathy Lueders, associate administra­tor of NASA’s human exploratio­n and operations mission directorat­e, said in the post. “With the high cadence of missions SpaceX performs, it really gives us incredible insight into this commercial system and helps us make informed decisions about the status of ourmission­s. The teams are activelywo­rking this finding on the engines, and we should be a lot smarter within the coming week.”

SpaceX did not respond to a request for comment.

Earlier this month, after the company had to delay a couple of launches because of mechanical issues, Elon Musk, SpaceX’s founder and CEO, said on Twitter he was going to Cape Canaveral to conduct a “broad review” of operations there.

The mission, which had previously been scheduled for Oct. 31, would launch NASA astronauts Michael Hopkins, Shannon Walker,

Victor Glover aswell as Japanese astronaut Soichi Noguchi to the space station for a stay of about sixmonths.

It would be SpaceX’s first operationa­lmission of flying full crews for extended stays after it successful­ly completed a shorter test mission with two astronauts in August to verify the performanc­e of the Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon spacecraft.

NASA and SpaceX said that test mission, from launch to docking to splashdown, went flawlessly. But since then SpaceX said that it had redesigned a portion of the capsule’s heat shield after noticing what Hans Koeigsmann, SpaceX’s vice president of build and reliabilit­y, said was “a little more erosion than we wanted to see.” The erosion was in a few small areas where the crew capsule joins the spacecraft’s trunk, an unpressuri­zed cargo hold that is discarded before the spacecraft slams into the atmosphere.

The friction between the thickening air and the speeding spacecraft generates temperatur­es as high as 3,500 degrees Fahrenheit and engulf the capsule in a fireball. The heat shield covers the bottom of the spacecraft and keeps the crew safe.

Speaking to reporters recently, Koenigsman­n stressed that there “was nothing to be concerned with at all times. The astronauts were safe, and the vehicle was working perfectly.”

Earlier this month, SpaceX scrubbed a pair of launches late in the countdown, prompting Musk’s plans for “a broad review of launch site, propulsion, structures, avionics & regulatory constraint­s thisweeken­d.” He added that he would make a trip to Cape Canaveral “to review hardware in person.”

A launch on Oct. 2 of a GPS satellite for the U.S. Space Force was scrubbed two seconds before liftoff after what Musk described as an “unexpected pressure rise in the turbomachi­nery gas generator,” which helps power the rocket’s Merlin engines.

A day earlier, SpaceX scrubbeda launchof its Starlink satellites with 18 seconds to go in the count because of a problem with a ground sensor. After scrubbing the Starlink mission, SpaceX bounced back and launchedth­ebatchof60­satellites on Tuesday. Still, SpaceX’s goal is to launch

much more frequently, and Musk said on Twitter recently that: “We will need to make a lot of improvemen­ts to have a chance of completing 48 launches next year!”

The GPS launch has not yet been reschedule­d.

The company’s Falcon 9 rocket has flown more than 90 times, the most of any U.S. rocket currently in operation and is considered a reliable workhorse. NASA uses it to fly cargo and supplies to the Internatio­nal Space Station and has certified it for human spacefligh­t as well.

But it has had problems. In 2015, a rocket carrying cargo to the station exploded some two minutes into flight after a steel strut failed, causing helium to overpressu­rize a second stage liquid oxygen tank. Then, in 2016, another exploded while being fueled on the launchpad ahead of an engine test after a helium tank buckled.

Last year, the company lost its Dragon spacecraft in an explosion ahead of an engine test fire. NASA and SpaceX investigat­ed all three incidents and eventually cleared SpaceX to fly again.

 ?? Craig Bailey / Associated Press ?? The launch delay follows previous issues this month, including a Starlink satellite launch.
Craig Bailey / Associated Press The launch delay follows previous issues this month, including a Starlink satellite launch.

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