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Wallops Island Rocket Launch Likely Visible In MD Tuesday: Livestream

The Electron rocket will appear like a bright, fast-moving star easily seen in the Maryland skies. The launch is set for Tuesday evening.

Rocket Lab's Electron rocket on the pad at Launch Complex 2 at NASA's Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia is set to launch Tuesday, Jan. 24, with radio frequency monitoring satellites. Marylanders should be able to see the rocket in the sky.
Rocket Lab's Electron rocket on the pad at Launch Complex 2 at NASA's Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia is set to launch Tuesday, Jan. 24, with radio frequency monitoring satellites. Marylanders should be able to see the rocket in the sky. (Image Credit: Brady Kenniston)

MARYLAND — Residents across Maryland should see a 59-foot-tall Electron rocket on its way to deploy satellites in space after it lifts off from a NASA facility in Virginia Tuesday night, NASA officials said.

The Electron, made by Rocket Lab USA, was originally scheduled to launch from Wallops Flight Facility in early December. Weather concerns and launch logistics kept people from seeing the first Electron launch from Wallops until the new year.

The updated launch date and time for this project, which NASA calls “Virginia is for Launch Lovers," is 6 to 8 p.m. on Tuesday, Jan. 24, after being delayed day by weather.

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Weather for Tuesday is 90 percent favorable for the evening launch window, NASA said.

The National Weather Service forecast for Wallops Island calls for mostly clear conditions, with a low around 38 degrees. Light and variable wind becoming southeast around 6 mph after midnight.

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Back-up launch dates are also scheduled, NASA said.

The rocket will lift off from Launch Complex 2 at Virginia Space’s Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport on Wallops Island. The mission will deploy radio frequency monitoring satellites for HawkEye 360.

The launch may be visible, weather permitting, to residents throughout much of the East Coast.

These circular areas show where and when people may see Rocket Lab's Electron launch in the sky, depending on cloud cover. Credits: NASA Wallops/Mission Planning Lab

"From a distance, Electron will appear like a bright, fast-moving star climbing upward through the night sky," the Wallops Flight Facility said.

Viewing locations on Chincoteague Island include Robert Reed Park on Main Street or Beach Road spanning the area between Chincoteague and Assateague Islands. The Virginia, Maryland and Delaware Atlantic beaches also provide good viewing locations.

The NASA Visitor Center at Wallops will be open for this launch, and will open at 4 p.m. on Jan. 24.

"With this mission, NASA is helping foster a growing low-Earth space economy and continues Wallops' 35-year history of support to the commercial launch industry," NASA said.

Tune in this evening to watch the launch:

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