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POT successfully lit center stage at the agency’s Stennis Space Center near Bay St. Louis, Mississippi on December 5 and began the process of loading propellant for the first time into the Space Launch System (SLS) on December 7. To complete this wet general test exercise, more than 700,000 gallons of cryogenic or supercooled propellants are transferred from the facility’s barge systems to the central stage. To test the propellant charging procedures, the engineers successfully charged a small amount of liquid hydrogen into the central stage without any problems. Then, they paused the propellant loading to review the data and adjust procedures before loading additional propellant.
This is the seventh of eight Green Run tests for the Artemis I main stage built by Boeing and the four RS-25 engines built by Aerojet Rocketdyne. For this test, the team focused on the first exposure of the core stage to cryogenic propellants. Six barges filled with liquid hydrogen and oxygen supplied the propellant to the B-2 test bed at NASA’s Stennis Space Center near Bay St. Louis, Mississippi, where the Green Run tests are taking place.
Engineers monitored the center stage’s giant propellant tanks and complex propulsion systems for potential leaks or other problems that stages have historically experienced the first time cryogenic propellants are loaded.
Operations continue and the team will refine procedures and resume wet clothing rehearsal testing in the coming days. The center stage performed well and there are no problems with the stage, the B-2 dyno or other facilities at Stennis.
The purpose of the test is to complete the initial operations using the new facilities and the new rocket stage and to adjust the processes as necessary. The wet dress rehearsal is the seventh of eight Green Run events to be held on the main stage at Artemis I. Please revisit this blog for more updates.
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