SpaceX, ULA See Launch Risk From Low Liquid Oxygen Supply Amid Surge In Covid Cases
Due to the latest surge in Covid-19 cases across U.S., the demand for oxygen to treat the patients has gone up. This has left in shortage of liquid oxygen for other uses.
- NASA has announced that it will delay the September launch of its next earth-surveillance satellite by a week.
- Liquid oxygen is an essential part of major launch firms like SpaceX, ULA, and Virgin Orbit.
- Companies are foreseeing delays in launches due to the shortage of liquid oxygen across the country.
- SpaceX uses methane and liquid oxygen to fuel the Merlin engines on its workhorse Falcon 9 rockets.
- SpaceX’s next-generation rocket, Starship, also uses LOX as a fuel.
- If a shortage of oxygen continues, then it could delay launches.
- On Thursday, SpaceX and Tesla Inc (NASDAQ: TSLA) CEO, Elon Musk tweeted that “This is a risk, but not yet a limiting factor,”
- On August 29, SpaceX has planned to launch 4,800 pounds of food and other supplies to the International Space Station.
- The company launched 26 rockets last year and plans to surpass that total in 2021.
- NASA and ULA have already announced that Landsat 9 will be delayed by a week to September 23. Landsat 9 is a surveillance satellite that monitors climate change.
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