Launch News Atlas V - NROL-36 + 11 nanosats - September 13, 2012

N_Molson

Addon Developer
Addon Developer
Donator
Joined
Mar 5, 2010
Messages
9,286
Reaction score
3,255
Points
203
Location
Toulouse
[FONT=VERDANA, ARIAL, HELVETICA, SANS-SERIF][SIZE=+2]Atlas 5 set for late-night launch from California[/SIZE][/FONT]


[FONT=VERDANA, ARIAL, HELVETICA, SANS-SERIF][SIZE=-2]BY JUSTIN RAY
SPACEFLIGHT NOW

Posted: July 29, 2012[/SIZE][/FONT]
spacer.gif



Ready to take a classified national security payload and a batch of hitchhiking cubesats into space early Thursday from California, a United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket is in the final days of preparations for blastoff.

The middle-of-the-night launch will occur some time between 12 midnight and 1:30 a.m. local (3:00-4:30 a.m. EDT; 0700-0830 GMT). The actual target liftoff time has not yet been revealed.

atlas5.jpg

[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][SIZE=-3]File image of an Atlas 5 rocket at VAFB. Credit: Pat Corkery/ULA[/SIZE][/FONT]

The mission will originate from Vandenberg Air Force Base's Space Launch Complex 3-East, a "classic pad" with a retractable service gantry and fixed umbilical tower. It stands in contrast to the Atlas 5's launch site at Cape Canaveral that assembles its rockets in an adjacent building and rolls the vehicles out to the spartan pad on a mobile platform.

This will be the fifth Atlas 5 to fly from the West Coast, each occurring successfully in the past four years with a trio of missions for the country's spy satellite agency and one with a U.S. military weather observatory.

Thursday's trip to space will deploy another cargo for the U.S. National Reconnaissance Office, the secretive government organization responsible for designing and operating the intelligence-gathering surveillance spacecraft for policy makers and military forces.

All details about the payload nestled inside the Atlas rocket's nose cone are kept classified. The agency will say only that the launch is known as NROL-36.

"Any NRO launch is critical to national security, delivering new intel capabilities out to the warfighters," said Lt. Col. Dan Gillen, commander of the 4th Space Launch Squadron that oversees Atlas 5 and Delta 4 rocket operations at Vandenberg. "Even though we are winding down some operations Afghanistan and Iraq, the need for intel is still growing."

Once the primary payload is delivered into its hush-hush orbital destination, the Centaur upper stage will maneuver to a different altitude where 11 miniature satellites built by universities, the military and a national lab will be ejected from 8 deployers all packed into one box-like container. That structure is attached to a bracket on the aft-end of the stage next to the RL10 engine where a helium bottle previously resided.

illustration.jpg

[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][SIZE=-2]An illustration of an Atlas 5 rocket and the secondary payload attach location on the Centaur. Credit: NRO[/SIZE][/FONT]

Available performance on this mission made it suitable to fly the secondary cubesats and deliver them into a useful orbit.

Four are flying through NASA's Educational Launch of Nanosatellite program that works with schools to give students real-life experience in the space business. Institutions launching their scientifically-meaningful hardware on this rocket via ELANA are the University of California, University of Colorado at Boulder, California Polytechnic State University and Morehead State.
In addition, the NRO's Mission Support Directorate is enabling 7 satellites to fly from the Army Space and Missile Defense Command, the Aerospace Corp., the University of Southern California and the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.

Objectives of the various spacecraft range from testing future satellite technologies, probing space weather and observing the cosmic X-ray background.

The launch campaign began when the Atlas first stage and Centaur arrived at Vandenberg in April from ULA's production factory in Alabama.
This is the most-basic version of Atlas 5, known as the 401 configuration with a four-meter-diameter payload shroud, no strap-on solid-fuel motors and a single-engine Centaur.

Stacking of the vehicle occurred in May as the bronze first stage, equipped with its kerosene-fed RD-180 main engine, was brought to SLC 3, rotated vertical and set onto the pad. Then the cryogenic Centaur got hoisted into position.

Garrett Skrobot, a NASA manager on the ELANA project, said the cubesats were attached to the Centaur while the rocket was still horizontal in the hangar.


payloadlift.jpg

[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][SIZE=-3]Payload hoisted into atop the Atlas 5 in July. Credit: ULA[/SIZE][/FONT]

The primary payload was readied for flight elsewhere on base and encapsulated in the nose cone before riding a special transport trailer to the pad to join up with its launcher on July 17. "These activities we've been planning and prepping for years in advance starting back at the factory. This hardware has been performing remarkably well," Gillen said.

See a photo gallery of the payload going to the pad.
Thursday's launch date has held steady on the calendar with no recent delays for this the Atlas 5 rocket's 32nd flight in the past decade.

"With every mission, we are always anticipating a lot of spectators because it's always a very exciting event," Gillen said. "I know because of the importance of this launch that there's a ton of invites out and I imagine that there will be many VIPs."

The final launch readiness reviews will be held Tuesday to give approval for starting the countdown operations Wednesday afternoon. Retraction of the gantry to unveil the 19-story rocket occurs about four hours before liftoff time and fueling commences about two hours later.

"Things are actually looking really good. We are on track. We are where we would hope to be, where we would expect to be at this point," Gillen said in an interview Friday.

It will be the fourth of four launches for the NRO in 2012. A Delta 4 put a radar-imaging satellite into a retrograde orbit from Vandenberg in April, an Atlas 5 carried a geosynchronous data-relay bird in June from Cape Canaveral, followed by a Delta 4-Heavy with a clandestine cargo also flown from the Cape in late June.


missionlogo.jpg

[FONT=Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif][SIZE=-2]The logo for this NROL-36 mission. Credit: NRO[/SIZE][/FONT]

As for the Atlas 5 program, the rocket will celebrate the 10th anniversary of its maiden mission on August 21, the same day as rollout at the Cape for launching NASA's Radiation Belt Storm Probes on August 23 at 4:08 a.m. EDT.

Also coming up later this year is the Oct. 26 deployment of the Pentagon's X-37B orbital spaceplane on its third voyage and launch of NASA's next Tracking and Data Relay Satellite on Dec. 6.

Vandenberg will host launches of the next Landsat Earth-resources spacecraft in February and the commercial GeoEye 2 Earth-imaging satellite in April.

Gillen's squadron at Vandenberg also has a much-anticipated Delta 4-Heavy rocket launch for the NRO slated for next August.

"I'm anticipating a really good ops tempo and expect Team Vandenberg to stay very busy over the next year," he said. Hardware for all three of those 2013 missions will soon begin arriving at the base for processing.
 
Last edited by a moderator:

Cosmic Penguin

Geek Penguin in GTO
News Reporter
Donator
Joined
Jan 27, 2011
Messages
3,672
Reaction score
2
Points
63
Location
Hong Kong
Launch is now scheduled at 07:44:30 UTC to avoid collision on orbit (a push-back of 4 minutes).

It's foggy over the hills of VAFB, but to quote the USAF's 30th Space Wing, "The fog will not stop us!".

index.php


index.php
 

Notebook

Addon Developer
Addon Developer
News Reporter
Donator
Joined
Nov 20, 2007
Messages
11,816
Reaction score
641
Points
188
Any live broadcast of this, there's nothing on NASA TV?

N.
 

Cosmic Penguin

Geek Penguin in GTO
News Reporter
Donator
Joined
Jan 27, 2011
Messages
3,672
Reaction score
2
Points
63
Location
Hong Kong

Notebook

Addon Developer
Addon Developer
News Reporter
Donator
Joined
Nov 20, 2007
Messages
11,816
Reaction score
641
Points
188
Thanks for the link boogabooga. Looks like the fog is getting indoors!

N.
 

Cosmic Penguin

Geek Penguin in GTO
News Reporter
Donator
Joined
Jan 27, 2011
Messages
3,672
Reaction score
2
Points
63
Location
Hong Kong
The launch is rescheduled on tomorrow at 12:27 am PDT (07:27 UTC).

Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif. (Aug. 2, 2012) – The launch of an Atlas V carrying the National Reconnaissance Office NROL-36 payload was scrubbed today due to a range instrumentation issue. There are no issues with the Atlas V vehicle or the NROL-36 space vehicle and these systems are safe and secure. The launch is rescheduled for Friday, Aug. 3 from Space Launch Complex-3 at Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., pending resolution of the range instrumentation system issue. The launch time for Aug. 3 is 12:27 a.m. PDT. The forecast for Aug. 3 shows a 90 percent chance of favorable weather conditions for the launch tomorrow.
 

Cosmic Penguin

Geek Penguin in GTO
News Reporter
Donator
Joined
Jan 27, 2011
Messages
3,672
Reaction score
2
Points
63
Location
Hong Kong
Did something got burned up on the range? :huh:

Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif. (Aug. 2, 2012) – The launch of an Atlas V carrying the National Reconnaissance Office NROL-36 payload has been further delayed to no earlier than Tuesday, Aug. 14 to provide additional time for resolution of a range instrumentation issue that developed during the initial launch attempt Aug. 2. There are no issues with the Atlas V vehicle or the NROL-36 space vehicle.
 

Cosmic Penguin

Geek Penguin in GTO
News Reporter
Donator
Joined
Jan 27, 2011
Messages
3,672
Reaction score
2
Points
63
Location
Hong Kong
Doesn't look like it can go in August.... :shrug:

http://www.spaceflightnow.com/atlas/av033/status.html

The lineup of Atlas 5 rocket launches this month -- a national security satellite deployment from California and a NASA space weather research project from Florida -- will flip-flop in order to give the Air Force more time to sort out Range instrumentation troubles that stalled the West Coast blastoff originally planned Aug. 2.

That puts the Aug. 23 launch of the Radiation Belt Storm Probes from Cape Canaveral next in the firing order. The rocket has been assembled and is scheduled to be topped by the tandem spacecraft on Thursday.

.......


Although the Vandenberg launch does not have a new launch date, the math says Aug. 30 would be the soonest it could occur, pending resolution with the Range.
 

MattBaker

New member
Joined
Jul 9, 2011
Messages
2,750
Reaction score
0
Points
0
That puts the Aug. 23 launch of the Radiation Belt Storm Probes from Cape Canaveral next in the firing order.

I hope they mean American missions, otherwise there's a Sea Launch scheduled for 16/17 August...
 

Cosmic Penguin

Geek Penguin in GTO
News Reporter
Donator
Joined
Jan 27, 2011
Messages
3,672
Reaction score
2
Points
63
Location
Hong Kong
Looking forward to the launch at 2:39 pm PDT (21:39 UTC) today! Apparently we can wait for sunny skies at T-zero. :thumbup:

http://www.spaceflightnow.com/atlas/av033/status.html

The weather outlook appears near-perfect for Thursday afternoon's Atlas 5 rocket launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California at 2:39 p.m. local time.

Vandenberg's trademark marine layer will burn off during the morning, leaving only a few lingering low-level clouds by launch time, Air Force meteorologists predict.

At launch time, the forecast calls for a few stratus clouds at 500 feet with tops at 800 feet and 2/8ths sky coverage, 7 miles of visibility, northwesterly winds of 12 to 18 knots and a temperature in the mid 60s F.

With high pressure controlling the stable weather picture, forecasters say none of the launch rules will be threatened. There is a 100 percent chance of weather permitting a launch on Thursday, as well as Friday for the backup opportunity.
 

orb

New member
News Reporter
Joined
Oct 30, 2009
Messages
14,020
Reaction score
4
Points
0
T-4 minutes and counting.
 

orb

New member
News Reporter
Joined
Oct 30, 2009
Messages
14,020
Reaction score
4
Points
0
Top