Wallops Island rocket was destroyed lower than estimated

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The suborbital rocket that was destroyed during launch last week was about 8,500 feet high and 3,000 feet downrange from NASA's Wallops Flight Facility, lower than initially reported, the space agency said on Wednesday.

In addition, the flight was only 20.1 seconds old when range safety personnel halted it because the ALV X-1 rocket was veering off track.

NASA had said shortly after the 5:10 a.m. launch Friday that the rocket was between 11,000 and 12,000 feet high, and between 20 and 27 seconds into flight when it was destroyed.

The rocket's designer, Alliant Techsystems, or ATK, is investigating the cause of the problem and focusing on the guidance navigation and control system. Trina Patterson, senior media relations manager for ATK Launch Systems, said Wednesday that propulsion operated as planned and thrust levels were in line with specifications. The rocket was turning smoothly, as anticipated, she said.

The problem may be related to what the company said on Friday was an unusual trajectory and altitude required for one of the experiments it carried, which would have tested temperature and pressure at hypersonic flight (five times the speed of sound). Outside experts will review the data to help the company determine what went wrong, she said.

Small pieces of debris fell on the south end of Wallops Island in the facility's designated hazard area, NASA said. Some debris floated south and was picked up from uninhabited beaches and marsh by the Wallops Recovery Team.

"The Wallops Recovery Team has investigated all reports from the public of falling debris and nothing would suggest that hazardous debris landed outside designated areas," NASA said in a release.

Debris could be hazardous, and should not be touched. Anyone finding pieces from the rocket or its scientific experiments should call (757) 824-1300.

Diane Tennant, (757) 446-2478, diane.tennant@pilotonline.com



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You are both wrong

I work at NASA. This project was not funded by the public, it was private. Also, it was not headed to Norfolk. It went off track, in mid air. Not towards a major city. Nor can this be blamed on NASA. Since ATK funded and made the rocket, we just supported it for the launch.

It was headed to Norfolk

I talked to somebody that works at NASA and he said that they blew it up because it was headed right for Norfolk.

Wasted money-Call the French

How much taxpayer's money was wasted here? I understand the need to press forward but let's make sure we get it right. Maybe we could bring in the French and get their advice? They launch rockets like this all the time.


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