SpaceX Nasa launch cancelled at last minute over weather

Andrew Griffin
Wednesday 27 May 2020 22:18 BST
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'We are not going to launch today' Moment Nasa astronauts are told rocket launch is cancelled due to weather conditions

A historic SpaceX and Nasa launch has been cancelled minutes before liftoff because of bad weather.

The mission would have been the first time astronauts have launched from US soil in almost a decade.

But poor weather across Florida stopped the launch from Kennedy Space Center. The countdown was halted less than 17 minutes before the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket was due to lift off.

The strength of the electric fields in the atmosphere made it unsafe for mission control to continue with the launch, SpaceX said. The company said that it expected those problem conditions would have cleared if it had 10 more minutes, but the nature of the "instantaneous" launch meant that the launch had to happen at its scheduled time or not at all.

SpaceX and Nasa will now try again to launch on Saturday, with another possible launch window on Sunday. Saturday's launch will take place slightly earlier, at 15.22 local time [20.22 BST].

But both of those days also threaten to have poor weather. The official forecast from the US Air Force 45th Weather Squadron shows that there is a 40 per cent chance that weather could stop those launch attempts.

Space veterans Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken were scheduled to ride into orbit aboard the brand-new Dragon capsule on top of a Falcon 9 rocket, taking off for the International Space Station from the same launch pad used during the Apollo moon missions a half-century ago.

Smiling, waving and giving the traditional thumbs-up, the two men said farewell to their families – exchanging blown kisses and pantomiming hugs for their young sons from a coronavirus-safe distance – before setting out for the pad in a gull-wing Tesla SUV, another product from SpaceX's visionary founder, Elon Musk.

Both Donald Trump and vice president Mike Pence arrived to watch the liftoff.

The flight would have marked the first time a private company sent humans into orbit.

It would also have been the first time in nearly a decade that the United States launched astronauts into orbit from US soil. Ever since the space shuttle was retired in 2011, Nasa has relied on Russian spaceships launched from Kazakhstan to take US astronauts to and from the space station.​

The preparations took place in the shadow of the coronavirus outbreak that has killed an estimated 100,000 US citizens.

"We're launching American astronauts on American rockets from American soil. We haven't done this really since 2011, so this is a unique moment in time," Nasa Administrator Jim Bridenstine said.

With this launch, he said, "Everybody can look up and say, 'Look, the future is so much brighter than the present.' And I really hope that this is an inspiration to the world."

Mr Musk, wearing a mask and keeping his distance, chatted with the two Nasa astronauts just before they left for the launch pad. The mission would put Mr Musk and SpaceX in the same league as only three countries – Russia, the US and China, which sent astronauts into orbit in that order.

"What today is about is reigniting the dream of space and getting people fired up about the future," he said in a NASA interview.

A solemn-sounding Musk said he felt his responsibilities most strongly when he saw the astronauts' wives and sons just before launch. He said he told them: "We've done everything we can to make sure your dads come back OK."

NASA pushed ahead with the launch despite the viral outbreak but kept the guest list at Kennedy extremely limited and asked spectators to stay at home. Still, beaches and parks along Florida's Space Coast are open again, and hours before the launch, cars and RVs already were lining the causeway in Cape Canaveral.

The space agency also estimated 1.7 million people were watching the launch preparations online during the afternoon.

Among the sightseers was Erin Gatz, who came prepared for both rain and pandemic. Accompanied by her 14-year-old daughter and 12-year-old son, she brought face masks and a small tent to protect against the elements.

She said the children had faint memories of watching in person one of the last shuttle launches almost a decade ago when they were preschoolers.

"I wanted them to see the flip side and get to see the next era of space travel," said Gatz, who lives in Deltona, Florida. "It's exciting and hopeful."

Hurley, 53, and Behnken, 49, are both two-time shuttle fliers.

NASA hired SpaceX and Boeing in 2014 to transport astronauts to the space station in a new kind of public-private partnership. Development of SpaceX's Dragon and Boeing's Starliner capsules took longer than expected, however. Boeing's ship is not expected to fly astronauts into space until early 2021.

"We're doing it differently than we've ever done it before," Bridenstine said. "We're transforming how we do spaceflight in the future."

Additional reporting by agencies

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