Nasa has been
forced to delay the launch of its
Dawn space
probe until September.
The probe, which will explore the largest bodies in the
Asteroid
Belt, was due to take off on Friday. However, bad weather meant that the
rocket could not be fuelled for fear of a lightning strike.
The launch was delayed again because there was no ship or aircraft available
to relay telemetry data from the Delta II rocket, and the decision has now been
made to push for a September launch.
"Primary reasons for the move were a combination of highly limited launch
opportunities for Dawn in July and the potential impact to launch preparations
for the upcoming Phoenix Mars Lander mission set for early August," said Nasa.
"A September launch for Dawn maintains all of the science mission goals that
a July launch would have provided."
Nasa does not have a window available in August because of the launch of the
Phoenix Mars Lander, which is heading to Mars to look for evidence of water.
The Dawn probe will travel over three billion miles to two of the largest
objects in the asteroid belt, Ceres and Vesta, and will send back information
about the formation of the planets in the Solar System.
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