. 24/7 Space News .
The Complexity Of Dawn Requires Intricate Steps To Reach Space

At Astrotech's Payload Processing Facility, the second array of solar panels on the Dawn spacecraft is deployed. Credit: NASA, Jim Grossman
by Marc D. Rayman
Cape Canaveral Fl (SPX) Jun 13, 2007
Workers have begun assembling Dawn's launch vehicle at Cape Canaveral's Space Launch Complex 17. Shunning the banal names used by fictional (and some actual) rockets for many decades, the real thing carries an appellation that evokes the true passion of our species for exploring the cosmos.

Readers here on Earth (and on most other planets with comparable or greater gravity) are sure to be stirred by the name Delta II 7925H-9.5, capturing everything that's cool about rockets. Regardless of what it is called, United Launch Alliance's family of Delta II rockets has a remarkable record of success in delivering spacecraft for NASA and other organizations to space.

As spectacular as a launch is, it represents only the beginning of what is far more exciting -- Dawn's interplanetary journey of exploration. Launch depends upon many prosaic (but important!) accomplishments, one of which did not go according to plan recently. A crane malfunctioned on pad B at Cape Canaveral's Space Launch Complex 17, where Dawn's launch vehicle is being erected. The rocket consists of 9 solid rocket motors and 3 stages.

The 6 motors that will be ignited at liftoff to augment the first stage weigh nearly 18,900 kg (more than 41,600 pounds) each and are 14.66 meters (48 feet 1 inch) tall. The other 3 motors, to be ignited about 79 seconds after liftoff, weigh nearly 19,100 kg (more than 42,000 pounds) each and are 15.06 meters (49 feet 5 inches) tall. (The 3 "air-start" solid motors are taller than the "ground-start" motors because their nozzles are longer.) Given both the great power and tremendous importance of the solid rocket motors, they have to be handled carefully.

Together reaching to a height of 29.4 meters (96 feet 5 inches), the first stage and the interstage (the section between the first and second stages) were placed on the launch pad first. Following that, 3 solid motors were erected on the pad. Then, on May 30, when the first one was being positioned to mate it to the first stage, the crane encountered a problem. No launch vehicle components were damaged.

It took about a week to restore the crane to health, and that delay has necessitated a change in Dawn's launch date. As recalled from tales told throughout the halo of the Milky Way galaxy since the very first of these logs was written [link to sentence beginning "Ion propulsion is also what allowed NASA to shift Dawn's launch date" in the first log], the extraordinary capability of its ion propulsion system gives Dawn much greater flexibility in when it can launch than interplanetary missions that use conventional chemical propulsion have. The most significant constraint now on Dawn's launch date is the more limited time during which another interplanetary probe can be launched from a nearby pad. Now in preparation for a thrilling mission at Mars, Phoenix is scheduled for an August departure from pad A. Because of some shared systems and other considerations, some time is needed between launches from these adjacent pads.

Dawn's new launch period opens on July 7. The launch window that day is from 4:09:31 to 4:36:22 pm EDT. (We apologize for the conflict with the 350,000th Event Horizon Games in the Virgo cluster of galaxies.) In case launch does not occur then because of unfavorable weather or some other problems, here are the windows on the subsequent few days:

July 8: 4:04:49 - 4:33:02 July 9: 3:56:15 - 4:25:23 July 10: 3:53:32 - 4:22:25 July 11: 3:45:13 - 4:14:44

Windows have been computed for still more days, and if launch does not happen by July 11, readers may be assured they can find later windows posted in a future log or in the on-screen captions of the Daily Asteroid Report broadcast on the Interstellar News Channel.

In preparation for launch, the spacecraft now has a full supply of 425 kg (937 pounds) of xenon propellant for its ion propulsion system. The tank already had almost 15 kg (33 pounds) of the noble gas that had been loaded in February 2005 at JPL. It took about 25 hours to load the rest of the xenon this week. While that may seem slow to fill a 272-liter (71.9-gallon) tank, it is worth recalling that more than 5 years of ion thrusting [link "more than 5 years of ion thrusting" to the paragraph beginning "By the end of its mission," in the December log] will be required to empty the tank.

The reaction control system[link the last 3 words to the sentence beginning, "The reaction control subsystem includes 12" in September], used as one of the means to rotate the spacecraft in the zero-gravity of spaceflight, was given its complete provision of 45.6 kg (101 pounds) of hydrazine. The propellant is highly toxic, so engineers and technicians loading it in the Hazardous Propellant Facility at Astrotech Space Operations wore today's most fashionable protective garments with self-contained air supplies.

The operations team spent long hours the last 6 days conducting a set of operational readiness tests (ORTs) [link to "The Dawn project also has been conducting operational readiness" in the previous log] known affectionately as the ORTathon. The hub for the ORTs is mission control at JPL, but participants were not only there but also at Orbital Sciences Corporation, Astrotech, all 3 Deep Space Network complexes (in Goldstone, California; Canberra, Australia; and Madrid, Spain), and the European Space Operations Centre in Darmstadt, Germany (the control center for a receiving station in Perth, Australia to be used for a few hours after launch). The operations team had to diagnose and resolve many guileful problems created by the simulation supervisor (known as "sim sup" as well as various other sobriquets, depending upon how imaginatively diabolical he is). The ORTs used a sophisticated combination of hardware and software to simulate the spacecraft.

The next log will continue with the progress in preparing to separate Dawn from Earth's grasp.

Email This Article

Related Links
Dawn at JPL
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It



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


Spitzer Nets Thousands Of Galaxies In A Giant Cluster
Greenbelt MD (SPX) May 29, 2007
In just a short amount of time, NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope has bagged more than a thousand previously unknown dwarf galaxies in a giant cluster of galaxies. Despite their diminutive sizes, dwarf galaxies play a crucial role in cosmic evolution. Astronomers think they were the first galaxies to form, and they provided the building blocks for larger galaxies.







  • Stardust Memories As Space Becomes The Final Frontier In Funerals
  • Vignette Helps NASA Make Giant Leap To The Moon And Beyond
  • Star Trek Fans Beam Into Canadian Wild West
  • Fourteen Space Agencies Sign Joint Exploration Agreement

  • Spirit Studies Layered Rocks At Home Plate
  • The Viability Of Methane-Producing Microorganisms In Simulated Martian Soils
  • Taking The Opportunity To Check New Driving Capabilities
  • THEMIS Marks A Milestone In The Imaging Of Mars

  • Delta 2 Launch To Launch COSMO-SkyMed Satellite
  • Russia Launches Four Satellites Into Orbit For Globalstar
  • Proton-M Carrier With US Telecom Satellite To Lift Off In June
  • Microgravity Enterprises Launches Commercial Payload From New Mexico Spaceport

  • NASA Satellites Watch as China Constructs Giant Dam
  • Kalam Calls For Development Of Satellite Systems For Entire Humanity
  • Boeing Launches Italian Earth Observation Satellite
  • Envisat Captures First Image Of Sargassum From Space

  • Full Set Of Jupiter Close-Approach Data Reaches Home
  • A Goofball Called Pluto
  • First Observation Of A Uranian Mutual Event
  • Continuing Our Jovian Journey

  • The Complexity Of Dawn Requires Intricate Steps To Reach Space
  • Spitzer Nets Thousands Of Galaxies In A Giant Cluster
  • A Team Of Astronomers Identifies The Most Massive Star Ever
  • Chronicle Of A Death Foretold

  • A Climate Monitoring Station On The Moon
  • No Plans To Join NASA Lunar Program Says Russian Space Agency
  • Oresme Crater Show Many Signs Of The Early Lunar Heavy Bombardment
  • First China Mission To Moon To Launch By Year End

  • Albertis Seeks Share In Galileo Partner Hispasat As Surrey Welcomes EU Support
  • EU Agrees Galileo Needs Public Bailout
  • EU To Back Galileo Bailout And But Faces Tough Talks On New Funds
  • Latest AeroAstro Asset Tracking Satellite Downlink Decoder Ready For Deployment

  • 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