After a long discussion of nitrogen, the article ends with this:
>Up next, NASA’s Artemis launch director, Charlie Blackwell-Thompson and mission management team will poll whether to give a “go” for tanking operations around 10:45 a.m. EST, following a briefing from weather officers in the U.S. Space Force Space Launch Delta 45. While there won’t be a launch today, teams are targeting 9 p.m. EST as the opening of a simulated launch window. Following a first run, teams will recycle the clock to T-10 minutes and will resume until stopping at approximately T-30 seconds.
JackfruitLatter6638 on
Seems like they have everything under control. Best of luck to the crew both inside and outside the rocket
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After a long discussion of nitrogen, the article ends with this:
>Up next, NASA’s Artemis launch director, Charlie Blackwell-Thompson and mission management team will poll whether to give a “go” for tanking operations around 10:45 a.m. EST, following a briefing from weather officers in the U.S. Space Force Space Launch Delta 45. While there won’t be a launch today, teams are targeting 9 p.m. EST as the opening of a simulated launch window. Following a first run, teams will recycle the clock to T-10 minutes and will resume until stopping at approximately T-30 seconds.
Seems like they have everything under control. Best of luck to the crew both inside and outside the rocket