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Watch the Buildup to NASA's Orion Test Launch Online

NASA is set to launch the first test flight of its deep-space Orion capsule this week, and you can watch activities leading up to Thursday's launch live online.
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/ Source: Space.com

NASA is set to launch the first test flight of its deep-space Orion capsule this week, and you can watch activities leading up to Thursday's launch online.

The Orion capsule — built for NASA by Lockheed Martin — is designed to eventually take humans deeper into space than they've ever gone before. Thursday's uncrewed test will help engineers learn more about how Orion's key systems operate in the harsh space environment. Starting Tuesday, NASA will air coverage of the run-up to Orion's launch. You can watch NASA TV's Orion events live on Space.com.

"During its 4.5-hour trip, Orion will orbit Earth twice and travel to an altitude of 3,600 miles into space," NASA said in a statement. "The flight is designed to test many of the elements that pose the greatest risk to astronauts and will provide critical data needed to improve Orion’s design and reduce risks to future mission crews."

Orion is expected to launch to space atop a United Launch Alliance Delta 4 Heavy rocket from Florida at 7:05 a.m. ET for the test flight (also called Exploration Flight Test-1). On Tuesday, NASA officials will host a noon ET press conference about what this Orion flight and future tests could mean for Mars exploration.

NASA will present two pre-launch news conferences — one at 1 p.m. ET Tuesday, the other at 11 a.m. ET Wednesday — to discuss the 4.5-hour test flight. Officials will also brief the media after the flight ends.

During this trip, Orion will make two orbits of Earth, with the second lap taking the capsule 15 times farther from the planet than the International Space Station. Officials have attached more than 1,000 sensors to the spacecraft to monitor its systems during flight.

Orion will also beam down images from its cameras as it is flying through space. NASA will use the information gathered during the test flight to make improvements to the spacecraft before humans set foot onboard.

For more about Orion and this week's test launch, check out NASA's detailed schedule of events.

— Miriam Kramer, Space.com

Follow Miriam Kramer on Twitter. Follow Space.com on Twitter, Facebook and Google+. Original article on Space.com.