Community Corner
NASA Rocket Launch: How To See It In NJ Skies Tuesday Night
Much of the east coast will see the 59-foot-tall rocket as it lifts off from Wallops Flight Facility. Here's the timing in NJ:

NEW JERSEY — You may see a bright light in the New Jersey skies on Tuesday night, as NASA conducts a rocket launch from a facility in eastern Virginia.
If skies are clear, residents will be able to see the Electron, made by Rocket Lab USA, on its way to space from Virginia's Wallops Flight Facility. The launch had been rescheduled several times in December and seems set to go forward Tuesday evening, Jan. 24, with the launch window from 6 p.m. to 8 a.m.
Much of the east coast will see the 59-foot-tall rocket as it lifts off from Virginia Space’s Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport on Wallops Island on its way to deploy satellites in space, NASA said.
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"From a distance, Electron will appear like a bright, fast-moving star climbing upward through the night sky," the Wallops Flight Facility said.
Southern New Jersey residents could see the rocket for up to 90 seconds, NASA said. And those in North and Central Jersey might see it for 90-120 seconds after takeoff — if skies are clear enough.
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NASA said the Electron will deploy radio frequency monitoring satellites for HawkEye 360.
"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.
A live webcast will stream at www.rocketlabusa.com/live-stream about 40 minutes before launch.
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