Kennedy Space Center 2010 Review, Look Ahead

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Dec. 30, 2010

Allard Beutel
Kennedy Space Center, Fla. 
321-867-2468 
allard.beutel@nasa.gov 

RELEASE: 57-10

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER 2010 REVIEW, LOOK AHEAD

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. â?? In 2010, NASAâ??s Kennedy Space Center helped 
begin a new volume to the agencyâ??s space exploration book as the 
storied Space Shuttle Program entered into its final chapters. 

Kennedy teams were involved in launching five missions this year; two 
on expendable launch vehicles and three on space shuttles. And on 
Dec. 8, SpaceXâ??s successfully launched its Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon 
capsule from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. The flight was the 
first for NASA's Commercial Orbital Transportation Services (COTS) 
program, which is developing commercial supply services to the 
International Space Station. It was also the first time a commercial 
company launched and returned a spacecraft to Earth.

Commercial companies going to low Earth orbit for both cargo and 
crewed missions was the focus of a new direction for NASA announced 
in February by the White House. That was followed up by a visit by 
President Obama to Kennedy on April 15 to outline details of his 
plans for the future of U.S. leadership in human spaceflight. The 
president committed NASA to a series of developmental goals leading 
to new spacecraft for reaching low Earth orbit and new technology for 
potential missions beyond the moon. The presidentâ??s visit preceded 
NASAâ??s Conference on the American Space Program for the 21st Century, 
held at the centerâ??s Operations and Checkout Building and Kennedy 
Space Center Visitor Complex.

NASAâ??s Launch Services Program based at Kennedy started its year on 
Feb. 11 by sending the agencyâ??s Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) into 
space aboard an Atlas V rocket Launch Complex-41 at Cape Canaveral 
Air Force Station. SDO is a first-of-its-kind mission to reveal the 
sunâ??s inner workings in unprecedented detail.

Less than a month later, NASAâ??s latest Geostationary Operational 
Environmental Satellite, or GOES-P, lifted off aboard a Delta IV 
rocket from Space Launch Complex-37 at Cape Canaveral Air Force 
Station, Fla. The latest National Oceanic and Atmospheric 
Administration (NOAA) satellite joined four other similar spacecraft 
to improve weather forecasting and monitoring of environmental 
events.

Just three days before the Launch Services Programâ??s first flight of 
2010, NASAâ??s Space Shuttle Program launched its first of three 
missions this year aboard shuttle Endeavour on Feb. 8. STS-130â??s six 
astronauts delivered the Tranquility node and cupola to the 
International Space Station during the two week flight. 

On April 5, space shuttle Discovery launched on its STS-131 mission to 
deliver science experiments, equipment and supplies to the space 
station. Discovery and its seven astronaut crew landed at Kennedy 
15-days later. 

What turned out to be the final shuttle mission of the year, STS-132, 
lifted off on May 14. Shuttle Atlantis and its six astronauts deliver 
the Russian-built Mini Research Module, cargo and critical spare 
parts to the station. Atlantis touched down at Kennedyâ??s Shuttle 
Landing Facility after the 12-day mission. 

STS-132 was the last scheduled space flight for Atlantis. Currently, 
itâ??s planned to be used as the "launch on need," or potential rescue 
mission for the final scheduled shuttle flight, Endeavour's STS-134 
mission. Among the new directions in the NASA Authorization Act of 
2010 passed by Congress in September and signed by President Obama in 
October was the approval to turn Atlantisâ?? planned rescue mission 
into an actual flight to the space station in the summer of 2011. 
NASA intends to fly this flight pending resolution of funding 
considerations.

The last scheduled shuttle mission for the year was supposed to be 
Discoveryâ??s STS-133 mission to bring the final pressurized module to 
be added to the U.S. portion of the International Space Station. Now 
STS-133 will be the first flight of 2011. A hydrogen gas leak on 
Discoveryâ??s external fuel tank scrubbed a Nov. 5 launch attempt. Then 
engineers discovered that small cracks on the tops of two support 
beams, called stringers, on the tank formed during the Nov. 5 fueling 
process. Engineers spent the next month collecting and analyzing data 
before performing a tanking test on Dec. 10 where the external tank 
again was filled with super-cold propellants while sensors recorded 
its movements and temperatures in an effort to understand why the 
stringer cracks occurred in the first place. 

On Dec. 22, Discovery was rolled off Launch Pad 39A and back into the 
Vehicle Assembly Building for more tank analysis and possible 
modifications, if the data indicates thatâ??s needed. Managers are 
planning to return Discovery to the pad in January to support another 
launch attempt in February. 

Two very visual signs the Space Shuttle Program is retiring came in 
2010. In May, the final shuttle solid rocket boosters segments 
arrived at Kennedy by rail. The segments will be used for Atlantis, 
whether itâ??s a potential rescue flight or real mission to the space 
station. Then in September, the final external tank to be delivered 
to Kennedy arrived and began being prepared for Endeavourâ??s STS-134 
mission. 

Even before the Obama Administration began taking NASA in a new 
direction for life after space shuttles, Kennedy management already 
was focusing on bringing new commercial companies to the space 
center. In June, the official groundbreaking ceremony for NASA and 
Space Floridaâ??s new technology and commerce park, known as 
Exploration Park at Kennedy was held outside the Space Life Sciences 
Laboratory. Exploration Park is designed to be a strategically 
located complex for servicing diverse tenants and uses that will 
engage in activities to support the space and space-related 
activities of NASA, other government agencies and the U.S. commercial 
space industry, as well as bring new aerospace work to the Space 
Coast.

Kennedy management also set up a new Center Planning and Development 
Office to enhance the economic vitality of Kennedy. Last spring, the 
office created a new web site aimed at making it easier to partner 
and do business with the space center, 
http://kscpartnerships.ksc.nasa.gov/.

After supporting its last space shuttle in 2009, Kennedyâ??s Launch Pad 
39B began being deconstructed this year to convert it from a shuttle 
launch pad to a commercial launch site that could host multiple types 
of spacecraft. 

Phase one of NASAâ??s new mobile launcher was completed this year. The 
355 foot tall tower could be converted to support commercial launch 
vehicles or possibly even large heavy-lift rockets.

Four-years worth of upgrades to Kennedyâ??s Launch Equipment Test 
Facility also were completed this summer. The LETF, which has 
fixtures that can simulate launch conditions, can support the Space 
Shuttle Program in its final months, as well as the Launch Services 
Program and commercial companies in the coming years.

To support the agencyâ??s new direction, the space transportation 
planning office was established at Kennedy to help develop a 
commercial capability to low-Earth orbit leading to astronaut launch 
services that NASA could buy to the International Space Station in 
the 2015 timeframe. The 21st Launch Complex program was established 
to help modernize Kennedyâ??s infrastructure and facilities and 
transform them from a space shuttle launch port into a multi-purpose 
launch complex that could support many different companies. Kennedy 
also is working on technology demonstration spaceflight plans that 
will support NASAâ??s new long-term exploration goals. 

To help employees with the Space Shuttle Program retirement, Kennedy 
held two large-scale job fairs this year, one in May and the other in 
September, along with months of career-building courses and other 
work force support efforts. In June, Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis 
announced that the U.S. Department of Labor awarded a $15 million 
grant to assist workers in Florida who will be affected by the end of 
the shuttle program. 

Also this summer, the White House established the Presidential Task 
Force on Space Industry Work Force and Economic Development, which 
examined how to use a $40 million, multi-agency initiative for 
regional economic growth and help prepare space industry workers for 
future opportunities. The Federal Aviation Administration also began 
establishing an office at Kennedy this year to help support the 
commercial human launch services endeavor.

Kennedy also expanded its â??green spaceâ?? efforts in 2010. On April 8, 
NASA, Florida Power & Light (FPL) and political leaders commissioned 
FPLâ??s Space Coast Next Generation Solar Energy Center at Kennedy 
Space Center. The 10-megawatt solar-power facility will provide 
electricity to more than 1,000 Florida homes and reduce annual carbon 
dioxide emissions by more than 227,000 tons. In December, Kennedyâ??s 
new Propellants North Administration and Maintenance Facility was 
reopened for business. It will be one of NASAâ??s â??greenestâ?? facility, 
expected to achieve the U.S. Green Building Council's Leadership in 
Environmental and Energy Design (LEED) Platinum status, the highest 
rating. And this summer, Kennedy helped with the unprecedented effort 
to save wildlife from the effects of the BP Deepwater Horizon oil 
spill in the Gulf of Mexico. Hundreds of endangered sea turtle eggs 
were brought to a hatchery at Kennedy and then the baby turtles were 
released into the Atlantic Ocean off Kennedyâ??s Central Florida coast.

Kennedy also hosted the first two forums for a new initiative designed 
to identify and support innovative work that will contribute to a 
sustainable future. Called Launch, NASA along with the other founder 
partners, the U.S. Agency for International Development, the U.S. 
State Department and Nike, brought experts together in March to focus 
on â??water.â?? Then in October, Launch turned its attention to â??health.â?? 
Launch plans other forums in 2011. On the education front, on May 28 
NASAâ??s first Lunabotics Mining Competition, hosted by Kennedy Space 
Centerâ??s Education Programs and University Research Division, drew 
more than 20 university teams to design and build remote controlled 
or autonomous excavators, called lunabots. The 2011 competition is 
expected to be even bigger.

On July 1, NASA helped welcome more than 100 people as new U.S. 
citizens during a naturalization ceremony at the Kennedy Space Center 
Visitor Complex. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services 
administered the Oath of Allegiance to candidates representing 36 
countries. This was the first time a NASA facility hosted a 
naturalization ceremony. 

And as the Space Shuttle Program winds down and new programs start up, 
Kennedy Space Center looks forward to hosting many new â??first timeâ?? 
events and milestones in the coming decade. For more information 
about NASA's Kennedy Space Center, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/kennedy 

	
-end-



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