ULA

ULA Vulcan Rocket prepares for Cert 2 mission

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United Launch Alliance (ULA) started moving the Vulcan rocket toward Space Launch Complex-41 (SLC-41) at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station for the Cert 2 launch.

The company has made several changes to the launch site and infrastructure at SLC-41. During the first liftoff, Vulcan Rocket modified at SLC-41 a liquid natural gas farm, and increased fuel and oxidizer storage capacity. The space launch service provider has increased the acoustic water suppression system capacity. It upgraded Vertical Integration Facility-1 (VIF-1) platforms, decks, and cranes to support new upgrades made to Atlas V and Vulcan rockets.

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Further modifications are underway to a second launch processing capability through an additional vulcan Launch platform (VLP-2) and Vertical Integration Facility (VIF-2). It will enable ULA to process two launch vehicles between both integration facilities.

United Launch Alliance (ULA) Vulcan Rocket (Image Source – ULA)

On January 8, 2024, ULA launched the first Vulcan rocket from Launch Complex-41 including two payloads – Astrobotic’s first Peregrine Lunar Lander, Peregrine Mission One (PM1). The second payload is an enterprise Celestis Memorial Spaceflights deep space Voyager mission.

Cert-1 was the first of the two certification flights required for the U.S. Space Force certification process. Back then, the rocket launch company announced Cert-2 for this year and a follow-up mission to support national security.

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Vulcan has secure more than 70 launches by the end of last year including 38 missions for Amazon Project Kuiper satellites and national security space launches in the Phase 2 launch procurement.

Following the vehicle rollout, the company will conduct numerous pre-launch tests on the ship and assure vehicle readiness for the upcoming liftoff. Meanwhile, ULA has not shared an estimated time of launch for the Vulcan Cert 2 mission.

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