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A bright, yellow, vertical rocket trail rises from a dark, watery horizon and into a starry night sky with the Milky Way extending across the background. At the bottom, near the horizon, the rocket trail fans out into a bright, triangular glow, wider at the bottom and narrowing farther upward. Near the top of the view, the trail breaks up with two gaps separating parts of the trail.
A large control room with wide screen of monitors with different views. There are three rows of desks, all with monitors at each station. There is another row of desks with monitors toward the bottom of the image. People are stationed throughout the control center.

Wallops Range Operations

The Wallops Flight Facility’s launch range, NASA’s only owned and operated range, is a national asset supporting government and commercial customers.

Back to Wallops Range about Wallops Range Operations

Managed by NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center’s Suborbital and Special Orbital Projects Directorate, the Wallops has been an active launch range since 1945. Since that time, Wallops has become renown for delivering responsive, cost effective, and safe launch and flight-test support, helping assure successful mission outcomes for a diverse set of programs from Government agencies, universities, commercial entities, and world-wide scientific community. Wallops conducts launch operations at Wallops Island, Virginia, and locations around the world through use of mobile range capabilities. The range maintains the facilities, systems, and skilled personnel needed to support a diverse set of missions including precision tracking, telemetry, and command and control systems. The range manages an aeronautical research airport, controls Restricted Airspace, and leverages DoD-controlled warning areas over the Atlantic Ocean.