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| Note |
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This expendable launch
vehicle and payload processing status will be issued
weekly. It will provide the status of upcoming NASA
missions scheduled for launch aboard expendable launch
vehicles. For additional information on NASA ELV
launches, visit: http://www.ksc.nasa.gov/elvnew/elv.htm.
|
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| SCISAT-1
ACE |
| Mission |
Scientific
Satellite-1 Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment |
| Launch Vehicle |
Pegasus
XL |
| Launch Location |
Vandenberg Air Force Base, California |
| Launch Date |
August
12, 2003 |
| Launch Time |
7:04:10
p.m. / 8:01:26
p.m. PDT (T-0 drop time: 7:10
p.m.) |
|
| |
| Status
(processing
notes) |
| At
Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., the SCISAT spacecraft
was mated to the Pegasus launch vehicle on July 28. The
fourth flight simulation was completed on July 31. The
spacecraft blanket closeout was completed on Aug. 1. The
payload fairing installation began on Monday, Aug. 4 and
will be completed by Wednesday, Aug. 6. Installation onto
the Pegasus transporter is scheduled for Wednesday, Aug.
6 followed by rollout to the hot pad and mating to the
L-1011 carrier aircraft on Aug. 9.
The Combined Systems Test, an integrated test involving
the launch vehicle, spacecraft and L-1011 aircraft, is
scheduled for Saturday, Aug. 9.
SCISAT-1
weighs approximately 330 pounds and will be placed in
a 400-mile-high polar orbit at an inclination of 73.9
degrees.
The
SCISAT mission will investigate processes that control
the distribution of ozone in the upper atmosphere and
measure the chemical processes that control the distribution
of ozone in the Earth's atmosphere, particularly at high
altitudes. The data from the satellite will provide Canadian
and international scientists with improved measurements
relating to global ozone processes and help policymakers
assess existing environmental policy and develop protective
measures for improving the health of our atmosphere, preventing
further ozone depletion. The mission is designed to last
two years. |
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| SIRTF
|
| Mission |
Space
Infrared Telescope Facility |
| Launch Vehicles |
Delta
II Heavy |
| Launch Pad |
Pad
17-B, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station |
| Launch Date |
August
23, 2003 |
| Launch Time |
1:37:29
a.m. EDT |
|
| |
| Status
(processing
notes) |
| Final
observatory closeouts were completed on Aug. 3. Mating
to the payload attach fitting is scheduled to begin Tuesday.
Transportation to Pad 17-B is scheduled for Aug. 10.
Cryogenic
servicing of the observatory with liquid helium was performed
on July 22. The erection of the Boeing Delta II launch
vehicle on Pad 17-B began on Friday, July 18, with the
erection of the first stage. Erection of the nine solid
rocket boosters began on Saturday, July 19 and was completed
on Friday, July 25. The second stage was hoisted atop
the first stage on July 28. The fairing was hoisted into
the launch pad clean room area on July 29.
The
Flight Program Verification, an integrated test of the
vehicle and the spacecraft, is scheduled to occur Aug.
12. The payload fairing will be installed around SIRTF
atop the Delta II on Aug. 14, followed by servicing with
cryogenic helium.
SIRTF is the fourth and final element in NASA's family
of orbiting "Great Observatories." All objects
in the universe with temperatures above absolute zero
(-460 F) emit some infrared radiation, or heat. Infrared
wavelengths lie beyond the red portion of the visible
spectrum and are invisible to the human eye. Most infrared
light emitted by celestial objects is absorbed by Earth's
atmosphere. Scientists rely on orbiting telescopes such
as SIRTF to capture data on celestial objects and phenomena
that are too dim, distant or cool to study using ground-based
telescopes or by other astronomical techniques.
Project
management of SIRTF for NASA is by the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory. The Observatory was built for NASA by Lockheed
Martin and Ball Aerospace.
The
launch period extends to Sept. 17. |
| |
| GP-B
|
| Mission |
Gravity
Probe B |
| Launch Vehicle |
Delta
II |
| Launch Pad |
SLC-2W,
Vandenberg Air Force Base |
| Launch Date |
November
13, 2003 |
| Launch Times |
7:30
p.m. PST |
|
| |
| Status
(processing
notes) |
| Download
and verification of new flight/mission software was completed
on Saturday, Aug. 2. The Compatibility Test Van (CTV),
supplies equipment to simulate NASA’s ground network
and space network, testing is scheduled to begin the week
of Aug. 11.
Gravity Probe B arrived at Vandenberg Air Force Base on
July 11 from the Lockheed Martin plant in Sunnyvale, Calif.
It was transported to NASA spacecraft processing hanger
1610 located on North Vandenberg Air Force Base. The spacecraft
was unloaded from its transporter, placed onto an assembly
and test stand, and the soft shipping cover was removed.
The erection of the Boeing Delta II launch vehicle at
Space Launch Complex 2 is currently scheduled to begin
on Sept. 15 with the erection of the first stage. Attachment
of the nine strap-on solid rocket boosters in sets of
three is scheduled for Sept. 16-18. The second stage is
planned for mating atop the first stage on Sept. 19. Gravity
Probe B will be transported from the spacecraft hangar
to Space Launch Complex 2 Oct. 29, and hoisted atop the
second stage. The Delta II fairing will be installed around
the spacecraft on Nov. 5 as part of final preparations
for launch.
Gravity Probe B is a relativity experiment developed by
NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, Stanford University
and Lockheed Martin. The spacecraft will test two extraordinary
predictions of Albert Einstein's general theory of relativity
that he advanced in 1916. Gravity Probe B consists of
four sophisticated gyroscopes to be launched into a 400-mile-high
orbit for a mission lasting 18 to 24 months. |
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