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Dawn
Arrives in Florida - A Little After Dawn April
10, 2007
Artist
concept of Dawn
Image
credit: William K. Hartmann / UCLA
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The Dawn spacecraft arrived
at Astrotech Space Operations in Titusville, Fla., at 9 a.m. EDT
today. Dawn, NASA's mission into the heart of the asteroid belt,
is at the facility for final processing and launch operations.
Dawn's launch period opens June 30.
"Dawn only has
two more trips to make," said Dawn project manager Keyur
Patel of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.
"One will be in mid-June when it makes the 15-mile journey
from the processing facility to the launch pad. The second will
be when Dawn rises to begin its eight-year, 3.2-billion-mile
odyssey into the heart of the asteroid belt."
The
Dawn spacecraft will employ ion propulsion to explore two of the
asteroid belt's most intriguing and dissimilar occupants:
asteroid Vesta and the dwarf planet Ceres.
Now that Dawn
has arrived at Astrotech near NASA's Kennedy Space Center, final
prelaunch processing will begin. Technicians will install the
spacecraft's batteries, check out the control thrusters and test
the spacecraft's instruments. In late April, Dawn's large solar
arrays will be attached and then deployed for testing. In early
May, a compatibility test will be performed with the Deep Space
Network used for tracking and communications. Dawn will then be
loaded with fuel to be used for spacecraft control during the
mission. Finally, in mid-May, the spacecraft will undergo
spin-balance testing. Dawn will then be mated to the upper stage
booster and installed into a spacecraft transportation canister
for the trip to Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. This is
currently scheduled for June 19, when it will be mated to the
Delta II rocket at Pad 17-B.
The rocket that will launch
Dawn is a Delta II 7925-H manufactured by the United Launch
Alliance; it is a heavier-lift model of the standard Delta II
that uses larger solid rocket boosters. The first stage is
scheduled to be erected on Pad 17-B in late May. Then the nine
strap-on solid rocket boosters will be raised and attached. The
second stage, which burns hypergolic propellants, will be hoisted
atop the first stage in the first week of June. The fairing which
surrounds the spacecraft will then be hoisted into the clean room
of the mobile service tower.
Next, engineers will perform
several tests of the Delta II. In mid-June, as a leak check, the
first stage will be loaded with liquid oxygen during a simulated
countdown. The next day, a simulated flight test will be
performed, simulating the vehicle's post-liftoff flight events
without fuel aboard. The electrical and mechanical systems of the
entire Delta II will be exercised during this test. Once the Dawn
payload is atop the launch vehicle, a final major test will be
conducted: an integrated test of the Delta II and Dawn working
together. This will be a combined minus and plus count,
simulating all events as they will occur on launch day, but
without propellants aboard the vehicle.
The NASA Launch
Services Program at Kennedy Space Center and the United Launch
Alliance are responsible for the launch of the Delta II.
The
Dawn mission to Vesta and Ceres is managed by JPL, a division of
the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, for NASA's
Science Mission Directorate in Washington, D.C. The University of
California Los Angeles is responsible for overall Dawn mission
science. Other scientific partners include Los Alamos National
Laboratory, New Mexico; German Aerospace Center, Berlin; Max
Planck Institute for Solar System Research, Katlenburg, Germany;
and Italian National Institute of Astrophysics, Palermo. Orbital
Sciences Corporation of Dulles, Va., designed and built the Dawn
spacecraft.
Source:
NASA / JPL

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