Expendable Launch Vehicle Status Report

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May 15, 2009

George H. Diller
Kennedy Space Center, Fla.
321-867-2468
george.h.diller@nasa.gov

STATUS REPORT: ELV-051509

EXPENDABLE LAUNCH VEHICLE STATUS REPORT

Mission: Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter/Lunar Crater Observation and 
Sensing Satellite (LRO/LCROSS) 
Launch Vehicle: Atlas V 
Launch Pad: Launch Complex 41, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla. 
Launch Date: No earlier than June 17, 2009 
Launch Window: TBD 

NASA decided to move the LRO/LCROSS from a June 2 window to a June 17 
window so as to allow the LCROSS team additional time to mitigate a 
potential thrust disturbance associated with the Atlas V Centaur 
fill/drain valves. The Centaur is being used in a way that has never 
been done before. While the Centaur hardware is designed and built to 
reliably perform its purpose of launching spacecraft, LCROSS is using 
the spent Centaur as a lunar impactor. This reuse has posed technical 
challenges which the LCROSS team has had to address. 

At Launch Complex 41, the Atlas V launch vehicle was rolled from the 
Vertical Integration Facility to the launch pad in preparation for 
the wet dress rehearsal that is under way today. The Atlas V is being 
fully loaded with propellants including liquid hydrogen, liquid 
oxygen and RP-1 fuel. The launch vehicle will be rolled off the pad 
and returned to the Vertical Integration Facility on Saturday, May 
16.

At the Astrotech payload processing facility, LRO/LCROSS is being 
encapsulated into the Atlas V payload fairing today. The spacecraft 
will be moved to the launch pad for integration with the Atlas V no 
earlier than May 21. 



Mission: Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite (GOES-O) 
Launch Vehicle: Delta IV 
Launch Pad: Launch Complex 37, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla. 
Launch Date: June 2009 
Launch Window: TBD 

On the Delta IV at Launch Complex 37, the three linear shape charges 
which are to be modified have been removed from the rocket. 
Meanwhile, data from the second wet dress rehearsal and the flight 
program verification that followed are undergoing the customary 
review. However, there appear to be no significant concerns.

At the Astrotech Space Operations Facility, the GOES-O spacecraft is 
enclosed in the payload fairing. The spacecraft remains in excellent 
health and is ready to be moved to the launch pad on June 6.

NASA has contracted with Boeing to build and launch the GOES-O 
spacecraft. The NASA Launch Services Program at Kennedy is supporting 
the launch in an advisory role. NASA spacecraft project management 
for GOES-O is the responsibility of NASA's Goddard Space Flight 
Center. After launch, once Boeing and NASA have completed on-orbit 
checkout and the spacecraft is operational, it will be turned over to 
NOAA. 



Previous status reports are available at:

http://www.nasa.gov/centers/kennedy/launchingrockets/status/index.html 
 

	
-end-



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