NASA's AIM Mission Soars to the Edge of Space

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April 25, 2007

Dwayne Brown/Tabatha Thompson
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1726/3895

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

Cynthia O'Carroll
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
301-286-4647

Nina Stickles
Hampton University, Hampton, Va.
757-727-5457 
RELEASE: 07-92

NASA'S AIM MISSION SOARS TO THE EDGE OF SPACE

VANDENBERG, Calif. - NASA's Aeronomy of Ice in the Mesosphere (AIM) 
spacecraft, the first mission dedicated to the exploration of 
mysterious ice clouds that dot the edge of space in Earth's polar 
regions, successfully launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base, 
Calif., at 1:26 p.m. PDT on Wednesday, April 25.

The mission will study clouds that are noctilucent, meaning they can 
be seen from the ground only at night, when they are illuminated by 
sunlight no longer visible from the Earth's surface.

"The successful AIM launch initiates an exciting new era in 
understanding how noctilucent clouds form and why they vary," said 
Principal Investigator James M. Russell, III, of Hampton University 
in Hampton, Va. "The coordinated AIM measurements will provide the 
first focused and comprehensive data set needed to unravel the 
mysteries of these clouds."

Noctilucent clouds are increasing in number, becoming brighter and are 
occurring at lower latitudes than ever before. "Such variations 
suggest a connection with global change," said Russell. "If true, it 
means that human influences are affecting the entire atmosphere, not 
just the region near the Earth's surface."

The Stargazer L-1011 aircraft released a Pegasus XL rocket at a drop 
point over the Pacific Ocean, 100 miles offshore west-southwest of 
Point Sur, Calif. AIM was launched at an azimuth of 192.5 degrees 
into a circular polar orbit of 375 miles with an inclination of 97.7 
degrees. 

At approximately 1:36 p.m., communications from a Tracking Data and 
Relay Satellite confirmed spacecraft separation, and the solar arrays 
deployed autonomously soon thereafter.

The spacecraft was declared operating nominally at approximately 2:44 
p.m., when it passed over the Svalbard, Norway, ground station. 
Spacecraft bus commissioning activities will be performed during the 
next six days while controllers verify satisfactory performance of 
all spacecraft subsystems.

Throughout a 30-day check-out period, all the spacecraft subsystems 
and instruments will be evaluated and compared to their performance 
during ground testing to ensure satisfactory operation in the space 
environment. The instruments will maintain their protective covers to 
shield the near pristine optical surfaces from contamination while 
the spacecraft outgases volatile materials. Fourteen days after 
launch, the optical covers will be removed in sequence by ground 
commands, and the instruments will begin scientific operations. 

During the next two years, AIM scientists will methodically address 
each of six fundamental objectives that will provide critical 
information needed to understand cloud formation and behavior.

"This mission has many firsts, including that Hampton University is 
the first historically black college and university to have the 
principle investigator and total mission responsibility for a NASA 
satellite mission," said Program Executive Victoria Elsbernd, NASA 
Headquarters, Washington.

NASA's Kennedy Space Center, Fla., is responsible for launch 
vehicle/spacecraft integration and launch countdown management. 
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., is responsible 
for the overall AIM mission management in collaboration with Hampton 
University, the University of Colorado, Boulder, and Virginia 
Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg. Orbital 
Sciences Corporation, Dulles, Va., is responsible for providing the 
Pegasus XL launch service to NASA.

AIM is the ninth small-class mission under NASA's Explorer Program, 
which provides frequent flight opportunities for world-class 
scientific investigations from space within the heliophysics and 
astrophysics science areas.

For more information about NASA and the AIM mission, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/aim

	
-end-



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