| The
Gravity Probe B spacecraft is in NASA's Payload Processing Facility
1610 on North Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. Preparations
are on schedule for the launch, which is scheduled to occur on
Saturday, April 17.
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testing of the spacecraft with the reworked ECU installed continues
without problems.
Reconditioning
of the spacecraft's cryogenic helium dewar back to a temperature
of 1.65 Kelvin has been under way. This is essentially a topping
off process that also cools the helium in the tank to a superfluid
state near absolute zero. The topping continued until 95% of the
helium in the dewar was in a superfluid condition. The dewar has
now been closed out, so the launch nominally needs to occur within
about 90 days. A final top-off is planned to occur at the launch
pad to assure the helium will last the planned 16-month duration
of the mission.
In other planned
spacecraft processing, the Gas Management Assembly (GMA) is undergoing
"rate of rise" testing that checks for leakage rates.
The GMA provides the helium gas required to spin up the gyroscopes.
It also performs magnetic flux reduction, or "flux flushing,"
to minimize noise or reduce the trapped magnetic field within
each gyro's housing.
Operations
to reinstall the solar arrays will begin on March 8. The spacecraft
is currently scheduled to be transported to Space Launch Complex
2 on April 1 and mated to the Delta II rocket.
Meanwhile,
the Boeing Delta II rocket is at Space Launch Complex 2, enclosed
within the gantry-like mobile service tower. It has successfully
completed its testing to date and will remain there until the
GP-B spacecraft arrives. The solid rocket booster inspections
performed as a precaution after the recent earthquake in central
California have been completed with no anomalies observed. There
are no Delta II launch vehicle issues or concerns at this time.
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 precise manner for tiny changes in the direction of
spin. Gravity Probe B will be launched into a 400-nautical-mile-high
polar orbit for a 16-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. |