EDITOR’S NOTE: Updated for third launch attempt Feb. 15.
Northrop Grumman’s Antares rocket will deliver a Cygnus supply ship into orbit Saturday to begin a pursuit of the International Space Station.
The rocket’s two RD-181 engines will ignite around 3.7 seconds before liftoff from pad 0A at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport, a complex owned by the state of Virginia at NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility.
Launch is timed for 3:21 p.m. EST (2043 GMT) Saturday.
The first stage’s two RD-181 engines will power up to 864,000 pounds of thrust and burn for 3 minutes, 14 seconds, then separate from the upper stage’s Castor 30XL motor about eight seconds later.
The launch, known as NG-13 in Northrop Grumman’s station resupply manifest, will be the seventh Antares mission using new, more powerful RD-181 engines, which the company ordered from the Russian engine-builder NPO Energomash to replace decades-old Russian-built AJ26 engines blamed for an Antares rocket crash seconds after liftoff in October 2014.
Once the first stage finishes its job on the NG-13 launch, the Antares rocket’s 12.8-foot-diameter (3.9-meter) diameter payload shroud will jettison in two halves at around T+plus 3 minutes, 53 seconds. An interstage adapter that connected the first and second stages will separate at T+plus 3 minutes, 59 seconds.
The launcher’s Castor 30XL solid-fueled upper stage will ignite at T+plus 4 minutes, 5 seconds, and generate up to 104,300 pounds of thrust during a burn lasting approximately 2 minutes, 43 seconds. The second stage motor will burn out at approximately T+plus6 minutes, 48 seconds, then deploy the Cygnus spacecraft at around T+plus 8 minutes, 38 seconds.
The spacecraft’s two cymbal-shaped electricity-generating solar arrays will unfurl in a fan-like motion around two hours into the mission, and the ship’s thrusters will begin fine-tuning its approach to the space station with a series of course-correction burns, setting up for a laser-guided final approach Tuesday.
Email the author.
Follow Stephen Clark on Twitter: @StephenClark1.