26.09.2007 15:30:00
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Orbital's Dawn Spacecraft Ready for Launch on 3-Billion-Mile 8-Year Journey to Explore Main Asteroid Belt
Orbital Sciences Corporation (NYSE:ORB) announced today that it is in
final preparations for the launch of its Dawn spacecraft on a historic
NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) mission to rendezvous with and
study Vesta and Ceres, the two largest asteroids in the main belt
between Mars and Jupiter. The Dawn spacecraft is currently scheduled for
launch by NASA from Cape Canaveral Air Force Base aboard a three-stage
Delta II rocket on September 27 during an available time window of
between 7:20 a.m. and 7:49 a.m. (EDT). This operational schedule is
subject to the completion of final pre-launch activities for the Dawn
spacecraft and the Delta II launch vehicle, as well as acceptable
weather conditions at Cape Canaveral at the time of the launch.
The Dawn mission’s primary objective is to
advance understanding of the origin and evolution of the solar system.
Vesta and Ceres are located in the main asteroid belt, a large region
located between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter. Both large asteroids,
also known as "protoplanets,”
are believed to have formed at the same time and in similar environments
as the solar system’s rocky inner planets
Mercury, Venus, Earth and Mars. Vesta and Ceres were selected for study
because available evidence shows that each has distinct characteristics
that may reveal clues to the conditions and processes early in the
formation of planets in our solar system. Vesta appears to be dry and
perhaps volcanic, whereas Ceres has a primitive surface with possible
concentrations of ice or liquid water in its polar regions or beneath
its surface. By studying these contrasts and comparing the two
asteroids, scientists hope to develop an understanding of the transition
from the rocky inner regions to the icy outer expanses of the solar
system.
"After over four years of working with NASA,
the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA) and JPL to make this
mission a reality, Orbital’s Dawn spacecraft
team is ready to get started with actual flight operations,”
said Mr. Carl Marchetto, Executive Vice President and General Manager of
Orbital’s Space Systems Group. "The
Dawn program is especially important to Orbital because it represents
the company’s first opportunity to
demonstrate our ability to execute and support a planetary mission for
NASA and JPL. With a successful Dawn launch and in-space operations, we
are hopeful that we will be able to support more of these vitally
important scientific missions in the future.” About the Dawn Spacecraft
Orbital is partnered with the Dawn program’s
Principal Investigator, Dr. Chris Russell of UCLA, and JPL, led by
Project Manager Keyur Patel. The company’s
role on the program has been to design, develop, manufacture, integrate
and test the Dawn spacecraft that will carry out the asteroid mission
and to support mission operations.
The 1,218 kg (2,685 lb) Dawn spacecraft will establish several "firsts”
as it carries out its mission. It will be the first dedicated scientific
mission to utilize an ion propulsion system developed by JPL, which was
integrated with the spacecraft platform by Orbital. The Dawn spacecraft
will carry enough Xenon propellant to enable it to change its speed by
more than 10 kilometers per second (about six miles per second) over the
course of six years of thrusting, far more than any other spacecraft’s
propulsion system has ever achieved. The Dawn spacecraft will also be
the first to rendezvous with and orbit a planetary body and then
transfer to and orbit a second planetary body. This "first”
is made possible by the ion propulsion system.
The solar arrays of the Dawn spacecraft are also unusually large for a
spacecraft of this size due to the need to generate sufficient
electrical power once the spacecraft has reached Vesta and Ceres. The
solar arrays measure approximately 20 meters (65 feet) from tip to tip
in their fully deployed configuration. Shortly after launch, while Dawn
is still relatively close to Earth, it will generate over 10 kilowatts
of power. However, the large solar arrays will still generate nearly 1.5
kilowatts of power while orbiting Ceres, despite being almost three
times farther away from the Sun than at the beginning of the mission.
About Orbital
Orbital develops and manufactures small rockets and space systems for
commercial, military and civil government customers. The company’s
primary products are satellites and launch vehicles, including
low-orbit, geosynchronous-orbit and planetary spacecraft for
communications, remote sensing, scientific and defense missions; ground-
and air-launched rockets that deliver satellites into orbit; and missile
defense systems that are used as interceptor and target vehicles.
Orbital also offers space-related technical services to government
agencies and develops and builds satellite-based transportation
management systems for public transit agencies and private vehicle fleet
operators.
More information about Orbital can be found at http://www.orbital.com.
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