SETI bioastro: Fw: 2-05-03 SPACECRAFT AND EXPENDABLE VEHICLES STATUS REPORT

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Thu Feb 06 2003 - 13:35:21 PST

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    ----- Original Message -----
    From: Buckingham-1, Bruce
    Sent: Thursday, February 06, 2003 1:30 PM
    To: 1 'ksc-news_release@kscnews. ksc. nasa. gov' (E-mail)
    Subject: 2-05-03 SPACECRAFT AND EXPENDABLE VEHICLES STATUS REPORT

    SPACECRAFT AND EXPENDABLE VEHICLES STATUS REPORT
    February 5, 2003

    George H. Diller
    Kennedy Space Center
    321/867-2468
                                              
    MISSION: Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX)
    LAUNCH VEHICLE: Pegasus XL
    LAUNCH PAD: Skid Strip, Canaveral Air Force Station
    LAUNCH DATE: March 25, 2003 (T)
    LAUNCH WINDOW: 6:50 a.m. - 8:50 a.m. EST (T-0 6:55 a.m.)

              At Vandenberg Air Force Base in California, the Orbital Sciences
    Pegasus launch vehicle completed the second scheduled flight simulation (2b)
    on Sunday, Feb. 2. All data from the test was nominal. The launch vehicle
    Combined Systems Test (CST) is scheduled for February 14. The Pegasus
    launch vehicle is currently planned for ferry to Cape Canaveral Air Force
    Station on the L-1011 aircraft on Feb. 18.

              GALEX, built for the Jet Propulsion Laboratory by the Orbital
    Sciences Space Systems Group, arrived at the Kennedy Space Center on Sunday,
    Feb. 2 and is preparing for prelaunch testing at the Multipurpose Payload
    Processing Facility (MPPF) located in the KSC Industrial Area. The
    spacecraft and test equipment is being unpacked, charging of batteries and
    test equipment will follow.

              The GALEX program management is by NASA's Goddard Space Flight
    Center and is part of Goddard's Small Explorer (SMEX) program. Spacecraft
    project management is the responsibility of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
    and the California Institute of Technology is the lead for mission science.

    MISSION: Propulsive Small Expendable Deployer System (ProSEDS)
    LAUNCH VEHICLE: Delta II
    LAUNCH PAD: Pad 17-A
    LAUNCH DATE: March 29, 2003
    LAUNCH WINDOW: TBD

              The Propulsive Small Expendable Deployer System - called ProSEDS -
    is a tether-based propulsion experiment that draws power from the space
    environment around Earth, allowing the transfer of energy from the Earth to
    the spacecraft.

              Inexpensive and reusable, ProSeds technology has the potential to
    turn orbiting, in-space tethers into "space tugboats" - replacing heavy,
    costly, traditional chemical propulsion and enabling a variety of
    space-based missions, such as the fuel-free raising and lowering of
    satellite orbits.

              The erection of the Boeing Delta II launch vehicle on Pad 17-A is
    currently scheduled to begin Feb. 13. Erection of the nine solid rocket
    boosters is scheduled for Feb. 14-18. The second stage is planned for
    hoisting atop the first stage on Feb. 19.

              ProSEDS personnel are installing data and electrical harnesses on
    the Delta second stage this week. The flight hardware is planned to arrive
    at KSC Feb. 27.

              ProSEDS is flying as a secondary payload beneath a U.S. Air Force
    Global Positioning System (GPS) satellite. Once the spacecraft arrives, it
    will be processed at the Vertical Processing Facility (VPF) located in the
    KSC Industrial Area. March 17, ProSeds will be attached to the Delta at the
    launch pad near the top of the second stage and will be followed by
    electrical connections and a spacecraft functional test.

    MISSION: Space Infrared Telescope Facility (SIRTF)
    LAUNCH VEHICLE: Delta II Heavy
    LAUNCH PAD: 17-B, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station
    LAUNCH DATE: April 15, 2003
    LAUNCH TIME: 4:34:07 a.m. EDT

              The Space Infrared Telescope Facility (SIRTF) will obtain images
    and spectra by detecting the infrared energy, or heat, radiated by objects
    in space between wavelengths of 3 and 180 microns (1 micron is one-millionth
    of a meter). Most of this infrared radiation is blocked by the Earth's
    atmosphere and cannot be observed from the ground.

              Consisting of an 0.85-meter telescope and three cryogenically
    cooled science instruments, SIRTF is one of NASA's largest infrared
    telescopes to be launched. Its highly sensitive instruments will give us a
    unique view of the Universe and allow us to peer into regions of space that
    are hidden from optical telescopes on the ground or such as the Hubble Space
    Telescope. Many areas of space are filled with vast, dense clouds of gas
    and dust that block our view. Infrared light can penetrate these clouds,
    allowing us to peer into regions of star formation, the centers of galaxies,
    and into newly forming planetary systems. Infrared also brings us
    information about the cooler objects in space, such as smaller stars that
    are too dim to be detected by their visible light, extra solar planets, and
    giant molecular clouds. Also, many molecules in space, including organic
    molecules, have their unique signatures in the infrared.

              The SIRTF spacecraft is scheduled to arrive at Kennedy Space
    Center March 6. The review to determine the readiness to erect the launch
    vehicle is scheduled to occur Feb. 13. The SIRTF spacecraft is scheduled to
    arrive at Kennedy Space Center March 6.

              The erection of the Boeing Delta II launch vehicle on Pad 17-B is
    currently scheduled to begin on Feb. 24. Erection of the nine solid rocket
    boosters is scheduled for Feb. 25-27. The second stage is planned for
    hoisting atop the first stage on March 3.

    MISSION: Mars Exploration Rovers (MER-1/MER-2)
    LAUNCH VEHICLES: Delta II/Delta II Heavy
    LAUNCH PADS: 17-A/17-B
    LAUNCH DATES: May 30/June 25
    LAUNCH TIMES: 2:28 p.m./12:34 a.m.

              The cruise stage, aeroshell and lander for the MER-2 mission
    arrived at the KSC Payload Hazardous Servicing Facility (PHSF) at 4 p.m. on
    Monday, Jan. 27. The lander was unpacked, cleaned and placed in the high
    bay on Tuesday. The aeroshell and cruise stage were removed from the
    shipping container today. The identical MER-1 flight hardware will arrive
    in mid-February. The first of the two Mars Exploration rovers will arrive
    at KSC in late February and early March.

                                                                     # # #

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