NASA Retires First Data Relay Satellite After Stellar Career

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June 25, 2010

Joshua Buck 
Headquarters, Washington                               
202-358-1100 
jbuck@xxxxxxxx 
RELEASE: 10-154

NASA RETIRES FIRST DATA RELAY SATELLITE AFTER STELLAR CAREER

WASHINGTON -- After a long and successful career providing 
communications support, NASA's groundbreaking Tracking and Data Relay 
Satellite (TDRS) 1 is retiring. 

On Sunday, June 27, NASA will shut down the satellite that launched 
into orbit during space shuttle Challenger's maiden voyage (STS-6) in 
April 1983. From 1983 to 1998, TDRS-1 provided NASA with the ability 
to communicate with other satellites in orbit. NASA reassigned TDRS-1 
in 1998 to support the National Science Foundation's (NSF) U.S. 
Antarctic Program and others on scientific, educational and 
operational endeavors. 

TDRS-1 worked with eight additional satellites to relay data and 
communications from more than 15 customers, including the NSF, the 
Hubble Space Telescope, the shuttle and the International Space 
Station. The TDRS system provides the capability not only to send 
commands and receive data, but also to navigate and talk with crews 
in orbit. 

"TDRS-1 paved the way for this incredible space communications 
system," said Bill Gerstenmaier, associate administrator for NASA's 
Space Operations Mission Directorate. "The remaining TDRS satellites, 
and the new satellites that will be online within three years, will 
carry on these critical capabilities for many NASA missions, 
including science and human spaceflight." 

TDRS-1 was the first satellite used to support launches from NASA's 
Kennedy Space Center in Florida in the early 1990s, returning 
real-time telemetry. It eliminated a dead zone over the Indian Ocean 
where there previously was no communication, providing full coverage 
for the space shuttle and low-Earth orbiting satellites. 

TDRS-1 proved helpful during a 1999 medical emergency at the NSF's 
Antarctic Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station. The satellite's 
high-speed Internet connectivity allowed personnel to conduct 
telemedicine conferences. Doctors in the United States aided Dr. 
Jerri Nelson, who had breast cancer, in performing a self-biopsy and 
administering chemotherapy. Later, in 2002, doctors used TDRS-1 to 
perform another telemedicine conference with the station to assist in 
knee surgery for a meteorologist. 

Because of its orbit, the satellite was able to link the North and 
South Poles and relayed the first pole-to-pole phone call. TDRS-1 
also transmitted the first internet connection and live webcast from 
the North Pole and supported the first global television event from 
the South Pole Station - a worldwide television broadcast to 
commemorate the beginning of the year 2000. 

TDRS-1 was instrumental in supporting innovative astronomy and 
astrophysics research programs at the South Pole Station, including 
the one-of-a-kind IceCube Neutrino Observatory and the South Pole 
Radio Telescope. The satellite transmitted gigabytes of science 
research data to university researchers worldwide on a daily basis. 

The first six TDRS satellites were built by TRW Inc. (now Northrop 
Grumman Corp.). Boeing Space and Intelligence Systems also built 
three TDRS satellites. NASA plans to launch two additional satellites 
into the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System by 2013. 
On June 13, 2010, the satellite arrived at its final destination, 
approximately 22,500 miles above the Earth. After the orbit is 
stabilized and the remaining fuel removed, NASA will shut down the 
satellite on Sunday, June 27. 

For more information about the TDRS system, visit: 



http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/multi/tdrs.html 


For more information about NASA and agency programs, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov 


The National Science Foundation is an independent federal agency that 
supports fundamental research and education across all fields of 
science and engineering. For more information on the NSF, visit: 



http://www.nsf.gov 

	
-end-



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