Northrop Grumman aborts launch of Antares rocket carrying NASA cargo minutes before liftoff

A Northrop Grumman Antares rocket carrying nearly 4 tons of NASA supplies for the International Space Station suffered a launch abort just minutes before liftoff late Thursday (Oct. 1). 

The rocket was less than three minutes from liftoff when it experienced the automatic abort while sitting atop Pad 0A of NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility on Wallops Island, Virginia. The launch was targeted for 9:43 p.m. EDT (0143 Oct. 2 GMT). 

“We have an abort. No launch tonight,” NASA spokesperson Rob Navias said in live mission commentary. 

The countdown was going smoothly until shortly before liftoff, when flight controllers paused the clock to allow a boat that had encroached inside the keep-out zone around the launchpad to clear the area. That pause led to a five-minute delay in the launch time, shifting from a 9:38 p.m. EDT target to a the 9:43 p.m. time. It was after resuming the count that the abort occurred at 2 minutes, 40 seconds before liftoff.

The abort was triggered due to an “unknown problem” with a piece of ground support equipment and not the Antares rocket or the uncrewed Cygnus cargo ship riding atop it, Navias said.

If Northrop Grumman can determine what triggered the abort quickly, the company could try and launch the Cygnus cargo ship for NASA as early as Friday night (Oct. 2). Liftoff would occur at 9:16 p.m. EDT (0116 GMT). 

You can watch that launch live here and on Space.com’s homepage beginning at 8:45 p.m. EDT (0100 GMT). You can also watch directly from NASA TV here

The Cygnus NG-14 cargo ship launching on Antares is carrying 7,624 lbs. (3,458 kilograms) of food, supplies and experiment hardware for astronauts living on the International Space Station. Chief among that haul is a new space toilet, called the Universal Waste Management System. 

As its name suggests, Cygnus NG-14 is the 14th cargo mission or NASA by a Northrop Grumman Antares/Cygnus pair. The company is one of two (SpaceX is the other) currently flying uncrewed cargo missions to the space station for NASA under a multibillion-dollar agreement. 

The Cygnus NG-14 spacecraft has been named the S.S. Kalpana Chawla in honor of  astronaut Kalpana Chawla, who died in the 2003 Columbia space shuttle accident alongside six other astronauts. 

Thursday night’s launch abort marked the fifth delay of a U.S. rocket launch in the last week, and the third back-to-back launch abort in 24 hours. On Sept. 24, Blue Origin’s suborbital New Shepard rocket suffered a power glitch during a launch try. Separate attempts to launch a United Launch Alliance (ULA) Delta IV Heavy rocket and two SpaceX Falcon 9 rockets also met with delays.

Late Wednesday night (Sept. 30), the ULA Delta IV Heavy rocket carrying the classified NROL-44 spy satellite suffered a launch abort just seconds before a planned liftoff from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. On Thursday morning, a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket had its own abort due to a ground sensor issue while trying to launch 60 Starlink internet satellites from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center near the Air Force Station. 

SpaceX has another Falcon 9 rocket launch planned for Friday night to loft a GPS III SV04 navigation satellite into orbit for the U.S. military. That mission, which has been delayed by weather and scheduling, is now due to launch from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station at 9:43 p.m. EDT, less than 30 minutes after Northrop Grumman’s NG-14 mission.

Source: Space.com

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