The payload fairing at the top of Gilmour Space’s first Eris rocket was supposed to deploy a few minutes after lifting off from northeastern Australia. Instead, the nose cone fell off the rocket hours before it was supposed to leave the launch pad Thursday.
Gilmour, the Australian startup that developed the Eris rocket, announced the setback in a post to the company’s social media accounts Thursday.
“During final launch preparations last night, an electrical fault triggered the system that opens the rocket’s nose cone (the payload fairing),” Gilmour posted on LinkedIn. “This happened before any fuel was loaded into the vehicle. Most importantly, no one was injured, and early checks show no damage to the rocket or the launch pad.”
This articles is written by : Nermeen Nabil Khear Abdelmalak
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