美国国家航空航天局为阿尔忒弥斯二号月球火箭加注燃料,为超级碗周日发射铺平道路


2026年2月2日 / 美国东部时间下午12:55 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻

工程师周一开始为美国国家航空航天局(NASA)的阿尔忒弥斯二号月球火箭加注超过75万加仑的超冷推进剂,进行关键的倒计时”湿彩排”演练,以验证这枚巨型火箭是否无泄漏,并为最早于2月8日将四名宇航员送往绕月之旅做好准备。

此次倒计时演练于周六晚上开始——由于佛罗里达州航天海岸的严寒天气推迟了两天——并在周一上午召开会议评估天气和团队准备情况后,发射主任查理·布莱克威尔-汤普森(Charlie Blackwell-Thompson)批准工程师开始远程控制的燃料加注操作。

美国国家航空航天局的太空发射系统(SLS)火箭矗立在肯尼迪航天中心39B号发射台顶部。工程师周一早早开始工作,将超过75万加仑的超冷液态氧和液态氢燃料注入这枚32层高的火箭,作为倒计时彩排的一部分,为发射扫清障碍。NASA

倒计时安排在东部时间晚上9点进行模拟发射。但工程师计划在此之后继续几个小时,以完成多个循环程序,确保团队能够应对实际倒计时中可能出现的任何问题和延误。

根据对燃料加注测试数据的审查结果,阿尔忒弥斯二号任务指挥官里德·怀斯曼(Reid Wiseman)、维克多·格洛弗(Victor Glover)、克里斯蒂娜·科赫(Christina Koch)和杰里米·汉森(Jeremy Hansen)最早可能在2月8日晚上11:20——超级碗周日——获得发射许可,这是2月份发射窗口期仅剩的三天中的第一天。如果太空发射系统(SLS)在2月11日前未能升空,此次飞行将推迟至3月初。

SLS是NASA计划用于将阿尔忒弥斯宇航员送入月球轨道的猎户座乘员舱的火箭,是世界上最强大的现役发射器。这枚332英尺高的火箭由两个捆绑式固体燃料助推器和四个主发动机提供动力,在发射时可产生880万磅的推力,主发动机燃烧液态氧和液态氢燃料。

该火箭的首次任务是在2022年进行的无人绕月测试飞行,返回地球。在发射前的准备阶段,工程师遇到了各种问题,从燃料泄漏到发射台管道中意外的推进剂流动异常。发射因此被推迟了数月,工程师们努力解决这些问题。

对于火箭的第二次发射,已实施了多项升级和改进,布莱克威尔-汤普森表示,她对此次燃料加注测试的顺利进行持乐观态度。

“我们为什么认为会成功?这是我们吸取的教训,”她上周表示。

“阿尔忒弥斯一号是一次测试飞行,在那次发射过程中我们学到了很多,”她说。”我们学到的关于如何为航天器加注燃料、如何加注液氧(LOX)、如何加注液氢的经验,都已融入到我们计划为阿尔忒弥斯二号火箭进行燃料加注的流程中。”

燃料加注操作预计在下午4:30左右完成,核心级和二级燃料箱将被注满并进入”稳定补充”模式。在实际的月球发射倒计时中,燃料加注的完成将为宇航员前往发射台并系入他们的猎户座飞船铺平道路。

但在此次燃料加注测试中无人登船。怀斯曼和他的船员们仍在休斯顿约翰逊航天中心接受飞行前的医学隔离,预计在完成彩排数据评估后才会在本周晚些时候飞往佛罗里达。

NASA fuels Artemis II moon rocket in test to clear the way for Super Bowl Sunday launch

February 2, 2026 / 12:55 PM EST / CBS News

Engineers began loading NASA’s Artemis II moon rocket with more than 750,000 gallons of supercold propellants Monday in a critical countdown “wet dress” rehearsal to verify the giant rocket is leak-free and ready to send four astronauts on a trip around the moon as early as Feb. 8.

The practice countdown began Saturday evening — two days late because of frigid weather along Florida’s Space Coast — and after a meeting Monday morning to assess the weather and the team’s readiness to proceed, Launch Director Charlie Blackwell-Thompson cleared engineers to begin the remotely-controlled fueling operation.

NASA’s Space Launch System rocket stands atop pad 39B at the Kennedy Space Center. Engineers began work early Monday to pump more than 750,000 gallons of supercold liquid oxygen and hydrogen fuel into the 32-story-tall rocket in a dress rehearsal countdown to clear the way for launch. NASA

The countdown was timed for a simulated launch at 9 p.m. EST. But engineers planned to continue several hours past that to run through several recycle procedures intended to make sure the team is ready to handle any problems and delays that might crop up during a real countdown.

Depending on the results of a review of the fueling test data, Artemis II commander Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen could be cleared for launch as early as 11:20 p.m. on Feb. 8 — Super Bowl Sunday — the first of just three days left in the February launch period. If the Space Launch System (SLS) isn’t off the ground by Feb. 11, the flight will slip to early March.

The SLS, the rocket NASA plans to use to send Artemis astronauts to the moon aboard Orion crew capsules, is the most powerful operational launcher in the world. It is a towering 332-foot-tall rocket powered by two strap-on solid fuel boosters and four main engines burning liquid oxygen and hydrogen fuel that generate 8.8 million pounds of thrust at liftoff.

The rocket’s first and so far only mission came in 2022 when it was launched on an unpiloted test flight around the moon and back. In the campaign leading up to launch, engineers ran into a variety of problems ranging from fuel leaks to unexpected propellant flow behavior in the launch pad’s plumbing. Launch was delayed for months while engineers worked to resolve the problems.

For the rocket’s second launch, multiple upgrades and improvements have been implemented, and Blackwell-Thompson said she was optimistic the fueling test would go well.

“Why do we think that we’ll be successful? It’s the lessons that we learned,” she said last week.

“Artemis I was the test flight, and we learned a lot during that campaign, getting to launch,” she said. “And the things that we learned relative to how to go load this vehicle, how to load LOX (liquid oxygen), how to load hydrogen, have all been rolled into the way in which we intend to load the Artemis II vehicle.”

The fuel loading operation was expected to be complete by around 4:30 p.m. with the tanks in the core and second stages topped off and in “stable replenish” mode. During an actual moon launch countdown, the completion of fueling would set the stage for the astronauts to head for the pad to strap into their Orion capsule.

But no one would be boarding for the fueling test. Wiseman and his crewmates remained in pre-flight medical quarantine at the Johnson Space Center in Houston and were not expected to fly to Florida until later this week, after the dress rehearsal data is assessed.

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