. 24/7 Space News .
New Horizons Payload Gets High Marks on Early Tests

The team will focus on actual payload performance tests, making sure each instrument is fully functional and ready to gather science data. This will include "first light" and calibration activities for the various instruments.
by Staff Writers
Laurel MD (SPX) Mar 31, 2006
In-flight checks of the New Horizons science payload are going well, as six of the seven instruments on board have completed tests proving they survived launch and demonstrated their basic functionality.

Over the past month, spacecraft controllers at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) flipped the "on" switches for Ralph, Alice, LORRI, SWAP, PEPSSI and the Student Dust Counter and confirmed that the instruments' thermal control systems work, their computer processors boot up and run the correct code, and they can receive commands and send telemetry (or status data) back to Earth.

In addition, both the Alice and SWAP instruments have opened the aperture doors that protected them from contamination on Earth and during launch. The PEPSSI and Ralph aperture doors will be opened later this spring; LORRI's door will be opened in early fall. (The dust counter and radio science experiment, named REX, do not have such doors.)

The team will complete the set of initial instrument checkouts in mid-April when it conducts similar exercises with REX, which is incorporated into the electronics of the spacecraft's communications system.

"The instruments are sending back a lot of housekeeping data that says they're working the way they're supposed to," says Mark Tapley, New Horizons science payload systems engineer from Southwest Research Institute.

New Horizons Principal Investigator Alan Stern, also of Southwest Research Institute, adds, "The mission science team is just beaming to know that the entire payload survived the stresses of launch in good health."

Performance Testing Ahead

Through spring and summer the team will focus on actual payload performance tests, making sure each instrument is fully functional and ready to gather science data. This will include "first light" and calibration activities for the various instruments.

So far, only the Student Dust Counter has passed this battery of checkouts, and is now collecting dust-impact data along the spacecraft's path to Jupiter. The first student-built instrument to fly on a NASA planetary mission, the SDC will detect microscopic dust grains produced by collisions among asteroids, comets and Kuiper Belt Objects during New Horizons' long journey �" giving scientists an unprecedented look at how collisional debris is distributed across the solar system.

Full payload commissioning is planned to be complete by early fall, several months before New Horizons passes through the Jupiter system in February 2007. "The Jupiter encounter will be a real confidence builder, when we see how the instruments perform in a real-world flyby," Tapley says.

Related Links
Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


"Zero G and I Feel Fine"
Baltimore MD (SPX) Mar 21, 2006
It's been over three weeks since I last filed a PI's Perspective, so there is a lot to catch you up on. We're more than 60 days into flight now, and in every respect, New Horizons is doing fine.







  • Top Microsoft Programmer Signs Up For Space Mission
  • NASA Announces New Communications Policy Of Openness
  • Russia Takes Lead Position In Space Tourist Industry
  • Space Adventures Chooses Singaporean Venue And Russian Vehicle Producer

  • MRO Begins Adjusting Orbit And Collecting Data
  • Spirit Team Gives Up On Front Wheel
  • NASA Selects Teachers To Aid In Mars Phoenix Mission
  • Lockheed Martin To Design Mars Science Lab Aeroshell

  • Sea Launch Set For April Mission From Pacific Floating Pad
  • Next Ariane 5 Launch Taking Shape
  • ATK Rocket Motors Power Successful Launch of Pegasus XL
  • NASA Is 'Three For Three' In Successful ST5 Launch

  • Envisat Makes Direct Measurements Of Ocean Surface Velocities
  • NASA Scientist Claims Warmer Ocean Waters Reducing Ice Worldwide
  • Space Tool Aids Fight For Clean Drinking Water
  • FluWrap: Deadly Strain Divides

  • New Horizons Payload Gets High Marks on Early Tests
  • "Zero G and I Feel Fine"
  • To Pluto And Beyond
  • New Horizons Update: 'Boulder' and 'Baltimore'

  • Jodrell Bank Astronomers Spy Giant Alcohol Cloud
  • Is Europa A Bottle Blonde In Disguise
  • Improved Instruments For Analysis Of Samples From Outer Space
  • Neutron Star Collisions Produce Super-Powerful Magnetic Fields

  • SMART-1 Tracks Crater Lichtenberg And Young Lunar Basalts
  • Quantum Technique Can Foil Hackers
  • Noah's Ark On The Moon
  • X PRIZE Foundation And The $2M Lunar Lander Challenge

  • GLONASS To Be Made Available For Civilian Use In 2006
  • New York School Districts Install GPS Tracking Systems in Buses
  • Glonass System To Open For Russian Consumers In 2007
  • TomTom Unveils a Range of New and Updated Content And Services

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement