| Gravity
Probe B is in NASA spacecraft processing facility 1610 on North
Vandenberg Air Force Base. Solar array installation began on Tuesday.
There are four arrays to be installed and tested. The first array
is now installed and testing of it is under way today. Solar array
installation activities are targeted for completion on Nov. 7.
The Delta II launch vehicle/payload adapter will be delivered
to the spacecraft processing facility on Nov. 10.
The spacecraft’s
cryogenic dewar is currently 96 percent full of cryogenic superfluid
liquid helium and maintaining the desired temperature of 1.66
Kelvin. The dewar will be topped off at the pad prior to launch.
At the launch
pad, integrated testing of the vehicle continues on schedule.
Qualification testing has been completed on the Redundant Inertial
Flight Control Assembly (RIFCA). This is the navigation and guidance
control unit for the Delta II. The tests simulated launch conditions
in the unique helium environment that will be created within the
payload fairing by the Gravity Probe B spacecraft. Routine integrated
guidance and control system checkout of the vehicle begins today.
An exercise
that involves loading of liquid oxygen aboard the first stage
and a limited “minus count” will be conducted on Nov.
4. A Simulated Flight test, a “plus count” that tests
the launch vehicle systems as if the vehicle were in powered flight,
will be performed on the following day, Nov. 5.
Marshall Space
Flight Center’s equivalent of a Mission Readiness Review
is scheduled to be held in Huntsville on Nov. 12.
In final launch
preparation activities, Gravity Probe B will be transported from
the spacecraft processing facility to Space Launch Complex 2 on
Nov. 19 and hoisted atop the second stage. Then the final major
test before launch, the Flight Program Verification, will be conducted
on Nov. 20. This is an integrated test conducted after the Gravity
Probe B spacecraft is mated atop the second stage of the launch
vehicle. The Delta II fairing will be installed around the spacecraft
on Nov. 25 as part of final preparations for launch.
The Gravity
Probe B mission 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: the geodetic effect (how space and time are
warped by the presence of the Earth) and frame dragging (how Earth’s
rotation drags space and time around with it). Gravity Probe B
consists of four sophisticated gyroscopes that will provide an
almost perfect space-time reference system. The mission will look
in a precision manner for tiny changes in the direction of spin.
Gravity Probe
B will be launched into a 400 nautical-mile-high polar orbit for
an 18-month mission.
Government
oversight of launch preparations and the countdown management
on launch day is the responsibility of NASA’s John F. Kennedy
Space Center. The launch service is provided to NASA by Boeing
Launch Services. |