WEBVTT 00:00.000 --> 00:19.920 This is Atlas Launch Control. We are now 2 hours 32 minutes, 32 seconds away from the liftoff of the Juno spacecraft aboard an Atlas V rocket. 00:19.940 --> 00:25.130 Liftoff is from Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral. 00:25.150 --> 00:35.130 The forecast is essentially unchanged from what we've been watching all week. There is just a 30% chance of not meeting the launch weather criteria. 00:35.150 --> 00:38.490 It takes everything we know to get off this planet. 00:38.510 --> 00:45.490 So, while everything that NASA does and building the Juno spacecraft and exploring Jupiter is all high tech, 00:45.510 --> 00:49.490 I think a rocket launch represents the extreme of that edge. 00:50.510 --> 00:57.590 The energy in the room on launch day is stressful, but in a good way, it's_it's a good feeling, it's_it's almost electric, 00:57.610 --> 01:02.590 everybody's excited and nervous and I've seen people before, you know, biting their nails. 01:02.610 --> 01:05.590 (Background Voices/Pre-Countdown) 01:06.610 --> 01:11.600 A rocket launch is one of the most amazing things to see. I mean, it's truly a cosmic event. 01:11.620 --> 01:23.600 ...Safety officer, go. Range weather and final clear to launch, go. LC LD channel 1, go ahead. LC, you have permission to launch. Roger. 01:23.620 --> 01:27.600 A launch is probably our single biggest risk in the entire mission. 01:27.620 --> 01:44.600 T minus 10, 9, 8, 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1. Ignition and liftoff of the Atlas V with Juno on a trek to Jupiter. 01:44.620 --> 01:51.600 A planetary piece of the puzzle from the beginning of our solar system. 01:51.620 --> 02:00.600 When you see it, the first thing that you're impressed with is just the amount of energy, you feel it because the ground is shaking 02:00.620 --> 02:10.600 and you're miles away and the waves are going through the ground like an earthquake would. 02:10.620 --> 02:19.610 You're canceling gravity. Gravity is pulling you down, you've got to get to a certain speed and then that's the escape velocity to leave the earth. 02:19.630 --> 02:35.610 Max queue, boosters throttling up, right on schedule, our general response looks good. 02:35.630 --> 02:37.610 You're watching something going from one planet to another. 02:37.630 --> 02:46.620 And we have solids 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 jettison. Visual indication that all solids have separated well. 02:46.640 --> 03:05.620 Current altitude is 45.8 miles, in altitude down range distance 69 miles, velocity 5,413 miles per hour. 03:05.640 --> 03:19.630 And we have payload fairing jettison and CFR jettison. 03:19.650 --> 03:35.840 We have retros and have spacecraft separation. This concludes the post count commentary for the AV 29 Juno mission.