NASA carries out a second test of the rocket that will decide when the astronauts will return to the Moon

Cape Canaveral, Florida – The POT retested the fuel of its giant lunar rocket this Thursday, after leaks interrupted the initial dress rehearsal and delayed the first lunar trip by astronauts in more than half a century.

For the second time this month, launch teams began pumping more than 700,000 gallons (2.6 million liters) of supercold fuel into the rocket atop its launch pad.

It is the most critical and difficult part of the account after two days of practice. The result will determine whether the launch of the Artemis II lunar mission with four astronauts in March is possible.

During the test two weeks ago, dangerous amounts of supercold liquid hydrogen leaked from connections between the pad and the Space Launch System’s 322-foot rocket. Engineers replaced a couple of gaskets and a clogged filter in hopes of passing the repeat test in the Kennedy Space Center.