October 10, 2024
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ULA takes its Vulcan rocket to launch pad ahead of second test flight – Spaceflight Now

United Launch Alliance's Vulcan rocket made the one-third mile trip from its Vertical Integration Facility to the launch pad at Space Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station late this morning. Monday, September 30, 2024. The rocket The second Fly ULA certification mission will be launched no earlier than Friday, October 4. Image: Will Robinson-Smith/Spaceflight Now

United Launch Alliance returned to the launch pad at Space Launch Complex 41 with its Vulcan rocket ahead of the vehicle's second launch. ULA needs to successfully conduct this second certification mission before it can begin launching national security payloads for the U.S. Space Force and National Reconnaissance Office.

The mission called Cert-2 is targeted for liftoff on Friday, October 4, during a three-hour launch period beginning at 6 a.m. EDT (1000 UTC). ULA completed stacking the rocket on Sunday, September 21.

After a period of bad weather caused by Hurricane Helene, Monday turned out to be a sunny, albeit hot and humid day on Florida's Space Coast as the rocket emerged from the Vertical Integration Facility to begin the 550-meter (0 .34 miles) to the launch pad. The vehicle's first movement was recorded at 10:27 a.m. EDT (1427 UTC) and the rocket reached its final destination, known as a “hard descent,” about an hour later.

United Launch Alliance's Vulcan rocket sits inside the Vertical Integration Facility before being moved to the pad at Space Launch Complex 41 on Monday, September 30, 2024. Image: Will Robinson-Smith/Spaceflight Now

After Monday morning's launch, the 202-foot (61.6 m) tall rocket will undergo a tank test on Tuesday, called a wet dress rehearsal. When fully fueled, this variant of the Vulcan rocket, designation VC2S, weighs approximately 1.5 million pounds (663,000 kg).

A static fire test of the two BE-4 engines at the base of the rocket before launch is not planned.

The mission will carry an inert payload, meaning nothing is designed to separate from the rocket's Centaur 5 upper stage following deployment of the payload fairings. During a conference call with members of the press in June, ULA President and CEO Tory Bruno mentioned that the Cert-2 flight will include some experiments and technology demonstrations “that are relevant to the development of technology for future insertion into our Centaur 5” upper stage.

“We will do some maneuvers with the upper stage just to fully characterize the limits of what Centaur 5 can do. We will measure how it behaves in relation to its cryogenics,” Bruno said during the June 26 conference call. “Obviously, it's a very long-duration upper stage that's required for these high-energy, direct-injection orbits, so it lasts a long time. But as you know, as you can imagine, we never planned a mission and we didn't design it until the last minute to know when we would run out of propellant or when boiling would consume an acceptable amount of propellant. We have some margins and hiccups from that, but this is an opportunity for us to get really more direct measurements of how that boiling behavior occurs. So we'll measure it along with these maneuvers.

“We will also have experiments attached to this inert payload that will help us understand how to extend the duration of the upper stage and what the practical limits for that might be in the future.”

Since then, Bruno and ULA have remained fairly tight-lipped about the details of those technical demonstrations and experiments. In a tongue-in-cheek response on social media to a question about the Cert-2 payload, Bruno simply said: “Highly proprietary secret sauce. It will be a while before we share more.”

For the first time, Sierra Space connected its Dream Chaser spaceplane to the Shooting Star module amid shake table testing at NASA's Armstrong Test Facility in Ohio. Image: Adam Bernstein/Spaceflight Now

ULA made the determination not to carry a customer payload aboard the rocket after Sierra Space informed them that its Dream Chaser spaceplane would not be ready for its planned launch to the International Space Station.

Like Northrop Grumman and SpaceX, Sierra Space is also part of the Commercial Resupply Service 2 (CRS-2) contract with NASA. In a 2016 press release, Sierra Space said that “Dream Chaser will provide a minimum of six cargo delivery missions to and from the ISS between 2019 and 2024.”

On September 27, Sierra Space said it completed a test to verify that its Passive Common Docking Mechanism (PCBM) met NASA standards to enable safe docking with the ISS. Earlier this month, it said its Shooting Star payload module had finished its acoustic tests.

“Our innovative Shooting Star payload module offers the ability to deliver additional capacity, flexibility and power to a wide range of missions,” Sierra Space CEO Tom Vice said in a statement. “On our first mission, Shooting Star will transport critical science, food and cargo to the International Space Station for NASA, and our cargo modules will continue to play an integral role in transporting supplies to space as we build an economy in Earth orbit. down through trade. space flight”.

The four-day test campaign was designed to ensure it could “withstand the acoustic environment of a Vulcan Centaur rocket launch.”

Second round

Completing the Cert-2 mission is crucial for the ULA. Not only will it allow the company to launch national security payloads using the Vulcan rocket, but it will also strengthen its position to bid on future missions for NASA.

In a September 2024 interview with Ars Technica, Tim Dunn, senior launch director for NASA's Launch Services Program based at Kennedy Space Center, said achieving a successful flight with Cert-1 “allowed them to be in conditions to bid for our missions”. .”

“A second Cert flight that will then demonstrate some other capabilities of the rocket will allow for more data for our certification team who are working closely with the U.S. Space Force certification team,” Dunn told Stephen Clark of Ars. “We're doing a lot of shared intergovernmental collaboration on certification work, which allows us all to have more data and more confidence in that launch vehicle to meet all the needs that we think we'll have in the next decade.”

ULA's Vulcan rocket launches on its first certification flight, carrying Astrobotic's Peregrine lunar lander. Image: Michael Cain/Spaceflight Now

However, a successful second flight of Vulcan does not automatically mean that ULA can move on to these important government missions. During an appearance at the Air, Space and Cyber ​​Conference earlier this month, Space News reported that Brig. Gen. Kristin Panzenhagen, who serves as executive director of the U.S. Space Force's Assured Access to Space program, said “it's not instantaneous that if they have a clean flight, they automatically get certified.”

“We'll have to review a lot of data after that just to make sure everything worked as expected. We will need some time afterwards to make sure everything is clean,” Panzenhagen said. “We're definitely looking forward to having them fully certified, so we can begin those national security space launches.”

During his remarks in June, Bruno said they intended to launch USSF-106 and USSF-87 before the end of the calendar year. The two Vulcan rockets that will be used to support this mission were delivered to the Cape earlier this year before ULA sent its Rocketship barge to perform some dry dock work.

While awaiting these future launches, ULA also continues to work on its second VIF located at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, as well as the launch infrastructure at Space Launch Complex 3 (SLC-3) located at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. Vandenberg Space Force. Bruno said on social media that both assets will come into play in 2025.

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