United Launch Alliance’s plans for the first launch of its new Vulcan rocket have been complicated by a violent explosion during testing of the rocket’s upper stage.
ULA was targeting May 4 for the first launch of the Vulcan vehicle from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida, with the rocket arriving at the site in late January.
However, on March 29, a Centaur upper stage suffered an anomaly and exploded during testing at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama. The incident was first reported by Ars Technica (opens in new tab).
Related: United Launch Alliance’s 1st Vulcan Centaur rocket arrives in Florida for debut flight
Outside of the test rig/ stand. Test article is inside (you can’t see it). Hydrogen leak. H2 accumulated inside the rig. Found an ignition source. Burned fast. Over pressure caved in our forward dome and damaged the rig. pic.twitter.com/0d0KpI1ggjApril 13, 2023
ULA CEO Tory Bruno later shared footage of the incident (opens in new tab) on Twitter, revealing that the blast followed a hydrogen leak that then dramatically ignited.
The upper stage that exploded was not part of the hardware for the first launch, but the investigation needs to be completed before Vulcan is clear to fly.
Bruno has since stated (opens in new tab) that the first Vulcan flight is likely going to be delayed into June or July, adding to years of delays (opens in new tab) to the program, including delayed delivery of engines built by Blue Origin, Jeff Bezos’ aerospace company.
The U.S. Space Force launch program office is currently monitoring the situation for potential long-term impacts on the national security launch program, SpaceNews reported (opens in new tab) last week.
The Vulcan Centaur stands 202 feet (62 meters) tall and is capable of lifting 7.7 tons (7 metric tons) to geostationary orbit. It is designed to replace ULA’s workhorse Atlas V and Delta IV launch vehicles
Vulcan is powered by a pair of Blue Origin-built BE-4 methane-liquid oxygen propellant engines in its first stage and up to six solid rocket boosters.
The rocket has plenty of action ahead, despite its setbacks. NASA will add Vulcan to its catalog of launchers for future missions, while Amazon has contracted (opens in new tab) ULA for 38 Vulcan launches to support the deployment for its Project Kuiper communications constellation.
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