Launch Team Firing Room I Simulation for Artemis I

John McClelland, an engine controllers engineer at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, participates in an Artemis I launch countdown simulation inside the Launch Control Center’s Firing Room 1. Under the leadership of Launch Director Charlie Blackwell-Thompson, nearly 100 engineers from Orion, Space Launch System (SLS) and the agency’s Exploration Ground Systems came together on Feb. 3, 2020, to work through a series of simulated challenges, as well as a final countdown procedure. During these exercises, different issues were introduced to familiarize the team with launch day operations, while providing them with an opportunity to practice how they would handle those issues in real-time. Artemis I will be the first integrated test flight of the Orion spacecraft and SLS rocket – the system that will ultimately land the first woman and the next man on the Moon.

John McClelland, an engine controllers engineer at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, participates in an Artemis I launch countdown simulation inside the Launch Control Center’s Firing Room 1. Under the leadership of Launch Director Charlie Blackwell-Thompson, nearly 100 engineers from Orion, Space Launch System (SLS) and the agency’s Exploration Ground Systems came together on Feb. 3, 2020, to work through a series of simulated challenges, as well as a final countdown procedure. During these exercises, different issues were introduced to familiarize the team with launch day operations, while providing them with an opportunity to practice how they would handle those issues in real-time. Artemis I will be the first integrated test flight of the Orion spacecraft and SLS rocket – the system that will ultimately land the first woman and the next man on the Moon.

Photographer NASA/Kim Shiflett
Album Artemis_Launch_Team