Expendable Launch Vehicle Status Report

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01.19.05

George Diller 
Kennedy Space Center, Fla. 
(321) 867-2493 

STATUS REPORT: ELV-011905

EXPENDABLE LAUNCH VEHICLE STATUS REPORT

MISSION:  Deep Impact
LAUNCH VEHICLE: Boeing Delta II 7925 
LAUNCH PAD: Pad 17-B, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla.
LAUNCHED: January 12, 2005

The launch of the Deep Impact spacecraft occurred successfully aboard 
a Boeing Delta II rocket at 1:47:08.574 p.m. EST on Jan. 12. The 
spacecraft was brought out of safe mode on Jan. 13 and is functioning 
normally. Spacecraft checkout is under way. The first course 
adjustment maneuver is scheduled to occur as planned Feb. 11, which 
will be 30 days after launch. 

The overall Deep Impact mission management for this Discovery class 
program is conducted by the University of Maryland in College Park, 
Md. Deep Impact project management is handled by the Jet Propulsion 
Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. The spacecraft was built for NASA by 
Ball Aerospace and Technologies Corporation. 

MISSION: Demonstration of Autonomous Rendezvous Technology (DART)
LAUNCH VEHICLE: Pegasus XL (Orbital Sciences Corporation) 
LAUNCH DATE: March 2, 2005 NET 
LAUNCH WINDOW: 9:35 a.m. â?? 9:42 a.m. PST

The payload test team is finalizing its review of the Pegasus 
second-stage loads data, or G-force the DART payload may experience 
during launch. The additional analysis is being done to ensure 
mission success. 

In the Orbital Sciences Pegasus hangar at Vandenberg Air Force Base, 
Calif., launch vehicle processing activities have resumed. Launch is 
scheduled for no earlier than March 2, subject to availability of 
downrange tracking assets. Testing of the launch vehicle Reaction 
Control System (RCS) regulator is under way this week. This is being 
done after some minor leakage of gaseous nitrogen was detected and 
the regulator was repaired. 

Though the payload fairing was removed, the DART spacecraft has 
remained mated to the Pegasus XL launch vehicle since the stand-down. 
The fairing is scheduled to be enclosed around DART once again on 
Feb. 23-24. The Pegasus XL is scheduled to be mated to the Orbital 
Sciences L-1011 carrier aircraft on Feb. 26. 

DART was designed and built for NASA by Orbital Sciences Corporation 
as an advanced flight demonstrator to locate and maneuver near an 
orbiting satellite. The DART spacecraft weighs about 800 pounds, is 6 
feet long and 3 feet in diameter. The Orbital Sciences Pegasus XL 
vehicle will launch DART into a circular polar orbit of 475 miles. 
DART project management is the responsibility of NASA's Marshall 
Space Flight Center and the NASA launch management is the 
responsibility of the Kennedy Space Center's Launch Services Program. 


MISSION: NOAA-N (National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration) 
LAUNCH VEHICLE: Boeing Delta II 7320 
LAUNCH PAD: SLC-2, Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif. 
LAUNCH DATE: March 19, 2005 
LAUNCH WINDOW: 2:22:01 â?? 2:32:01 a.m. PST 

The NOAA-N spacecraft arrived at Vandenberg Air Force Base at 10 a.m. 
PST on Jan. 13 from the Lockheed Martin plant in Sunnyvale, Calif. It 
was taken to NASA spacecraft processing hangar 1610 located on North 
Vandenberg Air Force Base. 

The spacecraft was unloaded from its transporter and placed onto an 
assembly and test stand. It was mated to the Delta II payload attach 
fitting on Jan. 15. Mechanical and electrical ground support 
equipment was set up and the necessary connections were made with the 
spacecraft. Spacecraft battery conditioning is now under way. 

The erection of the Boeing Delta II launch vehicle at Space Launch 
Complex 2 began on Jan. 12 with the erection of the first stage and 
interstage adapter. The three strap-on solid rocket boosters were 
attached to the vehicle on Jan. 17. The second stage is scheduled to 
be hoisted atop the first stage later this week. 

After launch, NOAA-N will be renamed NOAA-18 and will provide 
measurements of the Earth's surface and atmosphere that will be 
entered into NOAA's weather forecasting models and used for other 
environmental studies. Each day, the satellite will send data to 
NOAA's Command and Data Acquisition station computers, adding vital 
information to forecasting models, especially over the oceans, where 
conventional data is lacking. 

The spacecraft will be turned over from NASA to NOAA after on-orbit 
checkout is complete. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland 
is responsible for NOAA-N project management. The spacecraft was 
built for NASA by Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company. The Delta II 
launch service is provided by the Boeing Expendable Launch Systems 
Company. Launch management is the responsibility of the NASA Kennedy 
Space Center Launch Services Program office. 

	
-end-



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