From my vantage point, about 30 miles away, I saw the rocket motor start, the glow dim, another flare of light, and then nothing. I was pretty sure it was an abort, though I did check my phone right away to make sure it wasn't something worse.NROL-44 did not go to space today. But we still got the traditional Delta IV Heave pre-launch FWOOSH.
The residual hydrogen burn-off happened, then the engines started, then they stopped about 3 seconds before liftoff. They're calling it a hot fire abort.From my vantage point, about 30 miles away, I saw the rocket motor start, the glow dim, another flare of light, and then nothing. I was pretty sure it was an abort, though I did check my phone right away to make sure it wasn't something worse.
They spent that time investigating a low temperature anomaly with the interstage equipment. They eventually decided it was still okay to launch tonight.I would not have minded if they decided to abort at the beginning of the launch window, instead of an hour and a half into it.
It was so late, all of the people fishing off the pier had gone home.
--PatrickEach [of the six] OGO [Orbiting Geophysical Observatory] spacecraft was developed to study the movements of Earth, and determine how our planet interacts with the sun. [sic] The satellites remained stalwart in that mission for a solid five years before NASA shut the project down. Unfortunately, at the time, the agency lacked a reliable way to retrieve satellites from orbit, so for the past 50+ years, we've just been waiting for the satellite to return to Earth of their own accord.
There was nothing to miss. Or miss. Or miss. No one went to space yesterday.GRAH-missed it, CURSE MY RIDICULOSITY!
No longer. Abort at T-2 seconds.Cygnus on its way. SpaceX pending.