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NASA Artemis launches countdown start, lightning strike assessment team at launch pad

Lightning Strike Artemis I at Pad 39B

This image of a lightning strike was recorded at Launch Complex 39B at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on the evening of April 2, 2022. On Saturday afternoon, August 27, there were three lightning strikes to the lightning protection system towers at launch. Pad 39B – turret 1 hit, turret 2 hit. Credit: NASA

SLS) rocket’s core stage and prepared the four RS-25 engines.

Meteorologists with Space Launch Delta 45 predict a 70% chance of favorable weather for launch on Monday, August 29. The weather guidelines for NASA’s Artemis I flight test identify conditions to launch the agency’s Space Launch System and Orion spacecraft.

NASA held a prelaunch media briefing. Participants included:

  • Mike Sarafin, Artemis mission manager, NASA Headquarters
  • Charlie Blackwell-Thompson, Artemis launch director, Exploration Ground Systems Program, Kennedy
  • Judd Freiling, ascent and entry flight director, Johnson
  • Rick LaBrode, lead flight director, Johnson
  • Melissa Jones, recovery director, Exploration Ground Systems Program, Kennedy
  • Melody Lovin, weather officer, Space Launch Delta 45
  • Jacob Bleacher, chief exploration scientist, Exploration Systems Development Mission Directorate, NASA Headquarters


The Artemis I management team provides a pre-launch briefing following a mission management team meeting prior to the Artemis I launch. NASA’s Space Launch System and Orion spacecraft will launch from Launch Pad 39B at the center for a flight test around the Moon on August 29. The uncrewed mission will demonstrate the ability of the SLS rocket to safely carry the Orion spacecraft around the moon and back and recover to Earth for the agency’s Artemis program.

NASA also held a briefing (embedded above) on their own moon[{” attribute=””>Mars exploration plans with the following participants:

  • Bill Nelson, NASA administrator
  • Bhavya Lal, NASA associate administrator for technology, policy, and strategy
  • Jim Free, NASA associate administrator, Exploration Systems Development Mission Directorate
  • Kathy Lueders, NASA associate administrator, Space Operations Mission Directorate
  • Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA associate administrator, Science Mission Directorate
  • Prasun Desai, NASA deputy associate administrator, Space Technology Mission Directorate
  • Randy Bresnik, NASA astronaut

NASA’s Space Launch System rocket and Orion spacecraft are scheduled to lift off from Kennedy’s Launch Pad 39B during a two-hour launch window that opens at 8:33 a.m. EDT (5:33 a.m. PDT) on Monday, August 29.

Lightning Strike With Artemis I at Pad 39B

A lightning strike was recorded at Launch Complex 39B at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida during the evening of April 2, 2022. NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS) and Orion spacecraft were undergoing a prelaunch test called a wet dress rehearsal at the pad for the Artemis I mission. The lightning strike was recorded by cameras stationed at the pad and mobile launcher using a special filter called a “clear day frame,” which provides an overlay of the raw frame on a reference image. Artemis I will be the first integrated test of the SLS and Orion spacecraft. Credit: NASA

As the Artemis I countdown progresses, rain and thunderstorms continued throughout yesterday afternoon at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. Earlier yesterday afternoon, there were three lightning strikes to the lightning protection system towers at Launch Pad 39B – a strike to Tower 1, and two strikes to Tower 2. Fortunately, the initial indications are that the strikes were of low magnitude.

A weather team has begun an assessment that includes collecting voltage and current data, as well as imagery. The data will be shared with a team of experts on electromagnetic environment efforts who will determine if any constraints on vehicle or ground systems were violated. Engineers will conduct a walkdown at the pad overnight, and if needed, conduct additional assessments with subsystems experts.


Take a look at different lightning strikes over the years at Launch Complex 39B at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The event was captured by high-speed cameras positioned at the launch pad and mobile launcher as well as the vehicle assembly building. For photos that appear in broad daylight, a special filter called “clear day frame” was used, which provides an overlay of the raw frame on a reference image. In Pad 39B, there are three 600-foot-high masts with overhead wires used to transmit electrical power around the perimeter of the panel to provide lightning protection for launch vehicles as they are handled and launched from the panel. Click here to learn more about the lightning towers.

The launch pad’s lightning protection system includes three 600-foot turrets and catenary wires placed to protect the missile, spacecraft and mobile launcher. The wires run to the ground roughly diagonally, directing the lightning current away from the rocket.

Overnight, engineers will also make preparations on the navel, operate the core stage, and begin charging the Orion Launch System and Space Launch System core stage batteries.

The first in a series of increasingly complex missions, Artemis I will be an unmanned flight test providing the basis for expanding human presence to the moon and beyond. The mission will showcase the performance of the SLS rocket and test Orion’s capabilities over the course of about six weeks as it travels about 40,000 miles behind the Moon and back to Earth.

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