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NASA to conduct Artemis I wet dress rehearsal test on June 20

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NASA is arranged to conduct a test to prepare the Artemis I mission, which will make the spaceship travel to the moon. The test will take place on June 20 at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.During the test, the launch team will train the operation to load propellan into the rocket tank and make a full launch backward count. The team will also drain the tank and practice the schedule and procedures they will use to be launched.The test, also known as the ‘wet dress exercise test’ is basically a dry road from the whole process of launching the rocket and leaving the earth’s orbit, all without crafts really leave the launchpad.

NASA was previously reported through a blog post that Artemis I rocket had made the 39B launch launch. The rocket left the vehicle assembly building (VAB) on June 6 for the launch foundation for the wet dress exercise test.Users who are interested will be able to watch exercises directly along with direct comments on the NASA television channel, NASA application, and the NASA website.

What happens during the test?

During the test, which will last for about two days, the team will begin by activating the facilities needed for launch and formally start the repetition of backwards. The launching control center team in Kennedy will then be connected to staff at the mission control center at Johnson Space Center in NASA in Houston along with the Eastern Range Space Force, and SLS Engineering Support Center at the Marshall Agency’s Space Aviation Center in Huntsville, Alabama. The launch control will be supported and tested, along with a rocket system and a different space aircraft and land support equipment.

“The team will then contain more than 700,000 gallons of cryogenic, or super cold, propellan including liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen into the rocket at the launch foundation at the cellular launch according to the detailed time line that they will use on the actual launch day. They will practice every backward phase, including weather briefings, planned detention in the countdown, conditioning and refilling propellars as needed, and validation examination, “”
NASA is mentioned in a post. “During the wet dress exercise, once the launch controller reached the point right before the RS-25 rocket engine will turn on on the launch day, they will recycle back to the T-10 minute point, and then continue the countdown once again after the detention. The team then deliberately stopped the countdown about 10 seconds before taking off which was simulated to show stopping the launch and draining the propellant from the rocket. Sometimes it is called “scrub,” launch controller can decide not to continue launch if technical or weather problems appear during or before the countdown, so it shows the ability to delete propellan will ensure the team is ready for various launch scenarios, “the post added.

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