STEREO Arrives in Florida to Begin Launch Preparations

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05.03.06

George Diller
Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
(321) 867-2468

Rachel Weintraub
Goddard Space Flight Center, Md.
(301) 286-0918

RELEASE: 30-06

STEREO ARRIVES IN FLORIDA TO BEGIN LAUNCH PREPARATIONS

NASA's Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO) spacecraft 
arrived today at Astrotech, a payload processing facility near 
Kennedy Space Center in Florida, to begin preparations and final 
testing for launch. Liftoff will occur aboard a Boeing Delta II 
rocket from Launch Complex 17 on Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in 
the summer.

STEREO consists of two spacecraft that together comprise the first 
mission to take measurements of the sun and solar wind in 3-D. This 
new view will improve our understanding of space weather and its 
impact on the Earth.

During its two-year mission, the two nearly identical spacecraft will 
explore the origin, evolution and interplanetary consequences of 
coronal mass ejections, the most violent explosions in our solar 
system. When directed at Earth, these billion-ton eruptions can 
disrupt satellites, radio communications and power systems. In 
addition, energetic particles associated with these solar eruptions 
are hazardous to scientific spacecraft and astronauts.

Truly an international effort, the STEREO mission utilizes scientific 
collaboration and instrument components provided by the United 
Kingdom, France, Germany, Hungary, Switzerland, and the European 
Space Agency. The instruments were integrated with the observatories 
by the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in 
Laurel, Md. Spacecraft testing was performed at APL and NASA's 
Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.

Now that both observatories are in Florida, technicians will begin the 
final activities to prepare them for launch. This includes 
integration and test activities such as: deployment of the solar 
arrays and high-gain antennas, installation of the flight batteries, 
a mission simulation for each of the two observatories (also 
involving the Deep Space Network), and a spacecraft Comprehensive 
Performance Test, an overall test of the spacecraft systems and its 
instruments. The observatory propulsion system will then be ready to 
undergo leak tests and fueling operations. Finally, the two 
observatories will be vertically stacked in their launch 
configuration for spin-balance testing before mating with the 
upper-stage booster. These operations are scheduled to take 
approximately three months.

The build-up of the Boeing Delta II rocket at Launch Complex 17 will 
begin later this month. The first stage is currently planned to be 
erected on Pad 17-B during the last week of May, followed by the 
attachment of the nine solid rocket boosters. The second stage is 
currently planned to be hoisted atop the first stage late in the 
first week of June.

STEREO is targeted for transportation to the launch pad and mating 
with the Delta II on July 10. The initial launch period for STEREO 
extends from July 22 to Aug. 6.

	
-end-



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