Ariane 6
Ariane 6 FM1 - Launch Sequence Dress Rehearsal
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First clear view of the Ariane 6 rocket that will launch into space on the launch pad at Europe\u2019s Spaceport in French Guiana, 20 June 2024.\nEurope\u2019s new rocket Ariane 6 went through a full \u2018wet dress rehearsal\u2019 it providing an exciting sneak peek of what\u2019s to come, stopping just seconds before engine ignition and of course, lift-off.\nSimilar to rehearsals carried out with a test rocket during combined test campaigns, this time the real flight model, its payloads, the launch pad and teams on the ground went through every step of launch operations; from pumping 180 tonnes of propellant \u2013 liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen \u2013 into the waiting Ariane 6, the rollback of the mobile gantry, running all of the ground control software and more.\nOne of the first steps was to roll back the colossal 90-m tall Ariane 6 mobile gantry building 120 m away from the launch pad \u2013 the first moment the complete rocket stood free.\nPumping fuel into the Ariane 6 then took about 3,5 hours, as technicians at the control centre first began by slowly cooling the pipes, valves, tanks and engines from the tropical temperatures in French Guiana of about 30 degrees Centigrade down to the super-chilled temperatures of the soon-incoming cryogenic fuels.\nAs much an art as engineering, the propellants used by Europe\u2019s new rocket Ariane 6 are supercooled to \u2013180\u00b0C for the oxygen and \u2013230\u00b0C for the hydrogen fuel. At these temperatures, any humidity already in the pipes would immediately freeze and could lead to blocked valves. To avoid this, any hint of air or moisture from the atmosphere was flushed out of the system by the inert (unreactive) gas, nitrogen, before fuelling began.\nOnce the tanks were full, teams continued topping them up as the liquid fuels would gradually boil away in the Sun. The rocket was subsequently drained of fuel in preparation for launch.\n