SpaceX postpones launch of top secretive Zuma mission
SpaceX postpones launch of top secretive
Zuma mission
U.S. aerospace firm SpaceX stood down on the launch of Zuma spacecraft scheduled for Thursday to review "data from recent fairing testing for another customer", pushing the mysterious launch to Friday at the earliest.
U.S. aerospace firm SpaceX stood down on the launch of Zuma spacecraft scheduled for Thursday to review "data from recent fairing testing for another customer", pushing the mysterious launch to Friday at the earliest.
"Though
we've preserved the range opportunity for tomorrow, we'll take the time needed
to complete the data review and then confirm a new launch date," the
company tweeted on Thursday.
SpaceX, based in
the state of California, is now targeting the launch of Zuma spacecraft atop a
SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket on Friday from Launch Complex 39A (LC-39A) at the U.S.
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)'s Kennedy Space Center in
Florida.
This will be
Falcon 9's 17th flight in 2017. The Falcon 9 rocket is set to deliver perhaps
its most secretive payload yet, a classified government satellite built by
defense contractor Northrop Grumman, to low-Earth orbit.
The purpose of
the mission, codenamed Zuma, is essentially unknown. It's unclear what kind of
spacecraft is going up, or which government agency the launch is for.
The launch comes
just one month after the mission became public, when media reported on
documents that SpaceX had filed with the U.S. Federal Communications
Commission, requesting authorization for a launch license as Mission 1390. As
reported, Zuma is a commercially contracted, built, and operated clandestine
spacecraft by Northrop Grumman via a contract award from the U.S. government.
Following stage
separation, Falcon 9's first stage will attempt to land at the company's
Landing Zone 1 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, SpaceX said.
To date, SpaceX
has returned and landed a Falcon 9's first stage 19 times on land and at sea.
Such landings are part of SpaceX's efforts to develop fully reusable rockets,
which the company believes could bring down spaceflight costs. It stands to
reason that the selection of the Falcon 9 was by far the cheapest and most launch-date
reactive choice for Zuma.
This is actually
not the first time SpaceX has sent something secret into space. After receiving
certification in 2015 to launch military satellites, the company has already
launched two classified payloads this year, and is slated to launch more over
the next couple of years.
In May, a Falcon
9 rocket delivered the NROL-76 spy satellite for the National Reconnaissance
Office, and followed that with the launch of an uncrewed X-37B space plane on
Sept. 7 on the OTV-5 mission for the U.S. Air Force.
Earlier this
month, SpaceX suffered a rocket-engine explosion during a test of its
next-generation model at the company's test facility in the city of McGregor,
Texas, when a propellant leak ignited, damaging the test stand, according to
media reports. The setback came the
company conducted 16 successful missions in 2017, twice as many as its previous
high in a calendar year. Also, SpaceX has landed this year 13 of those rockets
back on Earth after launch.
SpaceX is still
investigating the McGregor explosion to find its "root cause."
Despite the explosion, the spaceflight company will push on with its planned
launches uninterrupted.
This is not the
first time SpaceX has experience failure investigation. On Sept. 1, 2016, a Falcon
9 blew up on the launch pad during a routine preflight test, destroying the
rocket, its payload and the launch pad, but no one was hurt.
In 2015,
SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket exploded a couple of minutes after lifting off from
Cape Canaveral en route to deliver cargo to the International Space Station. No
one was on board nor injured.
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