Kennedy Space Center Reflects on a Successful 2006

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01.08.07

Bruce Buckingham
Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
321-867-2468

RELEASE: 02-07

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER REFLECTS ON A SUCCESSFUL 2006

As NASA's Kennedy Space Center prepares for a busy 2007, our successes 
of the past year are recounted as we set the stage for our future 
activities.

Three successful space shuttle launches, five expendable launch 
vehicle missions, award-winning technology and processing several 
large payloads and components for delivery to the International Space 
Station were just some of KSC's 2006 achievements.

To prepare for the transition from the Space Shuttle Program to NASA's 
Constellation Program and future space exploration missions, KSC 
aligned with other NASA centers by combining the engineering work 
force into one new engineering group.

On Feb. 8, the Virgin Atlantic Airways GlobalFlyer aircraft took off 
from KSC's Shuttle Landing Facility in an attempt to set a new world 
record for the longest flight made by any aircraft. Piloted by Steve 
Fossett, the aircraft used more than 13,000 feet of the 15,000-ft. 
runway before taking to the sky.

In March, the center held a ribbon-cutting ceremony to officially open 
the newly constructed Operations Support Building II. The five-story, 
189,000-square-ft. facility comprises more than 900 office spaces, a 
300-person mission conference center with an observation deck, 
training rooms, computer rooms, multimedia conference rooms and 
technical libraries. The building replaces modular housing and 
trailers in the Launch Complex 39 area.

In April, during the 25th anniversary of the first space shuttle 
flight, KSC renamed and dedicated the Launch Control Center's Firing 
Room 1 as the "Young-Crippen Firing Room" to honor STS-1 Commander 
John Young and Pilot Robert Crippen.

Also in April, KSC announced plans to seek private-sector partners to 
develop a space technology and commerce park to be named "Exploration 
Park at John F. Kennedy Space Center." The park is expected to 
attract tenants engaged in space technology, space commerce and space 
education.

In June, KSC selected the Atlas V, now part of the United Launch 
Alliance rocket family, for the Mars Science Laboratory. This is a 
mission to carry a large rover to the red planet in fall 2009. The 
six-wheeled rover will explore Mars for two years, examining sites to 
identify where the building blocks for life may exist.

The European Space Agency's Columbus research laboratory, an important 
component to the space station, arrived in June at KSC's Space 
Station Processing Facility where it will be prepared for launch on a 
future shuttle mission.

Space Shuttle Discovery lifted off on mission STS-121 on July 4 (the 
first mission to launch on Independence Day) from Launch Pad 39B, 
carrying critical hardware to the station for future assembly 
missions. The mission restored the station to a three-person crew for 
the first time since May 2003. STS-121 also marked the first use of 
the Launch Control Center's newly renovated Firing Room 4.

Space Shuttle Atlantis launched on mission STS-115 on Sept. 9, also 
from Launch Pad 39B, carrying the P3/P4 integrated truss segment for 
installation on the station. The mission resumed assembly of the 
station after a hiatus of four years.

The final launch of the year was made by Discovery on mission STS-116 
on Dec. 9. It was the last currently planned shuttle launch from 
Launch Pad 39B. The challenging mission included installing the P5 
short space truss segment to the station's P3/P4 truss segment and 
completely rewiring and activating the station's electrical and 
thermal control systems.

Launch Pad 39B is being transitioned to NASA's Constellation Program 
and readied for the Ares 1-I test flight, scheduled for no earlier 
than 2009.

The first shuttle launch in 2007 is currently targeted for no earlier 
than March 16.

KSC's Launch Services Program managed five expendable launch vehicle 
liftoffs from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla., and Vandenberg 
Air Force Base, Calif.

NASA's New Horizons mission, the first in the New Frontiers Program, 
launched using Lockheed Martin's massive Atlas V launch vehicle on 
Jan. 19 from Cape Canaveral. The piano-sized spacecraft will travel 
to Pluto and conduct the first close-up, in-depth study of the dwarf 
planet and its moons in summer 2015.

NASA's Space Technology 5 spacecraft, also known as ST5, launched 
aboard the Orbital Sciences Pegasus XL vehicle from Vandenberg on 
March 22. ST5 is comprised of three miniature orbiting satellites 
which were flight tested in the harsh environment of space, and their 
ability to make research-quality scientific measurements was 
evaluated over 90 days.

The Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite-N, also called 
GOES-N, launched into orbit for NASA aboard a Boeing Delta IV on May 
24 from Cape Canaveral. Upon entering Earth's orbit, it became 
GOES-13. The satellite is rotating around the planet to view 
developing weather systems over the Central and Eastern Pacific 
Ocean; North, South and Central America; and the Western and Central 
Atlantic Ocean.

Expendable launch vehicle missions aboard Boeing Delta II vehicles 
included CloudSat/CALIPSO on April 28 from Vandenberg, and the twin 
Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatories (STEREO) on Oct. 25 from 
Cape Canaveral.

CloudSat and CALIPSO are orbiting the Earth as part of the "A-train," 
a constellation of Earth-observing satellites. CALIPSO provides 
climate observations, including the advanced study of clouds and 
aerosols, to help improve the ability to predict climate change and 
study the air we breathe. CloudSat's trio of experimental satellites 
uses radar to perform the first study of clouds and precipitation on 
a global basis from space. STEREO is NASA's first 3-D solar imaging 
mission to help researchers understand how the sun creates space 
weather.

Among payloads arriving at KSC for processing was NASA's Time History 
of Events and Macroscale Interactions During Substorms (THEMIS) 
spacecraft on Dec. 11, for final testing and launch preparations. 
THEMIS is scheduled to lift off on Feb. 15 aboard a Delta II rocket 
from Launch Complex 17-B at Cape Canaveral.

With Constellation Program activities moving forward, NASA awarded a 
90-day study contract to four space-related companies to separately 
examine long-term ground processing and infrastructure planning at 
KSC.

In September, the 50-foot door on the west end of the Operations and 
Checkout Building was opened for business for the first time in more 
than 20 years. The state of Florida provided $35 million to bring 
Lockheed Martin to KSC to use this facility to complete final 
assembly and testing of the new Orion crew capsule.

In October, public hearings were held at KSC and in Brevard County for 
the National Environmental Policy Act. These meetings were held to 
assess the potential impacts the Constellation Program may have on 
the KSC environment, including its wetlands, flood plains and 
wildlife.

In late 2006, a team of scientists from KSC and the University of 
Central Florida received NASA's 2005 Invention of the Year Award for 
a groundwater treatment technology called Emulsified Zero-Valent 
Iron, or EZVI. The technology, developed at KSC, also received NASA's 
2005 Commercial Invention of the Year Award. NASA has signed six 
nonexclusive licenses with companies to market and further develop 
EZVI.

James W. Kennedy, the eighth KSC director, retired from the agency at 
the end of the year. William W. Parsons assumed the role as KSC's 
ninth director on Jan. 4, 2007. After the Columbia tragedy, Parsons 
led the return-to-flight activities for the agency as Space Shuttle 
Program manager and played a major role in the success of the 
Discovery STS-114 mission in 2005.

KSC's work force looks forward to an aggressive launch schedule in 
2007, with five space shuttle missions and eight expendable launch 
vehicle missions, along with continuing transition work for the new 
Constellation Program and future space launches.

	
-end-



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