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NASA Rocket May Be Visible In New Jersey Sky Monday Night
NASA will launch a suborbital sounding rocket Monday from Virginia. Residents in seven states, including NJ, may be able to see it.

NEW JERSEY, NJ — A NASA rocket may be visible from central and south New Jersey on Monday night, after it's launched from Virginia.
NASA will launch a suborbital sounding rocket Monday from Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia. Residents in seven states, including NJ, may be able to see it, NASA said.
The rocket will carry scientific equipment into space for an experiment, and then return to Earth.
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The rocket launch is scheduled between 7 and 10 p.m. Eastern on Monday, March 21. Live coverage will begin on the Wallops Facebook and YouTube pages.
People in central and southern New Jersey may be able to see the rocket for 10-30 seconds, NASA said.
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Backup launch dates are set between March 22 and April 1, according to NASA.
The official name for this project is BOLT: Boundary Layer Transition and Turbulence. This flight is BOLT II.

The BOLT flight experiment is designed so scientists can better design hypersonic vehicles to withstand heat, NASA said.
This particular rocket is a Terrier-Improved Malemute rocket, which can carry up to 400 pounds.
As NASA explains, the mission's purpose "to increase the understanding of boundary layer transition, turbulent heating, and drag on vehicles flying at hypersonic conditions. Boundary layer transition to turbulence is the process where smooth, laminar flow becomes unstable after which turbulence dominates and significantly increases heating and drag on high-speed vehicles."
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