http://www.nj.com/weather-guy/index...._to_watch.html
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Thanks for the heads-up!
Too bad the flight was scrubbed tonight.
If it had launched around 5:50pm it would have crossed the path of the ISS (where the rocket is heading)!
A few shots of the ISS as it passed overhead:
https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3955/...3ca84ba8_z.jpg
The ISS on the left and a CRJ departing PHL on the right.
https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3956/...1c8cffdc_z.jpg
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/st...l#.VE7Tx76GuEk
According to the NASA site it was scrubbed because there was a boat down range in the trajectory of the rocket if it lifted. Mmmmm, was it close enough to the liftoff to cause a security concern?
They will try again at 6:22 tomorrow night!!
I had a great view on the track at the middle school!! Beautiful evening with a crescent moon and a great view of the JFK 22 arrivals lining up from the SE. Did see the ISS fly overhead though at 6:51, west to SSE.
would this be following the same path as the rocket from wallops last winter? I think it was viewed to the south and went from the west to the east
HOLY CRAP it just EXPLODED upon launching!! WOW!!!!
Was at Battery Park again this evening, but with a high thin layer of clouds this time (though thin enough that we probably would have seen it). Launch time comes and goes, no one sees it - everyone thought we were clouded out until someone checked Twitter or something and gave the news. There was a groan, a shrug, and then everyone headed off. Oh, well.
There are two impressive videos I saw. One was from a spotters area across the water!! The sound and force of the explosion is amazing and pretty much scares the hell out of many of the spotters who turn to getaway. Another is from an aircraft some miles away!! That is just as amazing!! Sorry I don't have the links available but worth your while to find and view.
A big shame is the lost payload of science experiments that were heading to the ISS for research!! Awful!!
my bad, here is the right one lol https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jHMmMgdcOSU
By now you all have seen it
that was my bad, distracted by work..lol shhh!
But it worked in Kerbal Space Program...
Mmmmmm, lets see.... You just watched a rocket crash and EXPLODE in a thunderous BLAST, the launch pad is in flames and the smoke rising looks like a mushroom cloud, yeah I might be leaving also. The fear of the unknown after a disaster like that and in this day and age of terrorism, well I have no problem with what they did!!
A think these folks may also have been bloggers, and wanted to go get to where they could learn more information and start reporting....WIFI!
Given that the engines were Russian-made...I have to believe that there was sabotage in the manufacturing process and Russia wanted this to happen. A successful launch was carried out from Baiknour in Kazakhstan hours later.
The engines were built by the Soviets in the 1960s for their Moon program. Some 20 years ago, they were purchased by Aerojet-Rocketdyne, modernized and refurbished, and eventually chosen for use in Antares. They are extensively tested by NASA prior to use. The Russians didn't sabotage this rocket.