Engineers made final preparations Sunday for the overnight start of another countdown to launch for NASA's leak-bedeviled Artemis moon rocket, setting the stage for a third attempt Wednesday.
Engineers made final preparations Sunday for the overnight start of another countdown to launch for NASA's leak-bedeviled Artemis moon rocket, setting the stage for a third attempt Wednesday to get the $4.1 billion booster and Orion crew capsule into space for an unpiloted maiden flight.
If any problems do show up, engineers will have two hours to resolve them before the launch window closes. The two strap-on boosters, which provide the lion's share of the rocket's initial thrust, will burn out and fall away about two minutes and 10 seconds after liftoff. The four hydrogen-fueled engines powering the core stage will shut down six minutes later, putting the Orion capsule and the SLS second stage into an initial elliptical orbit.
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