
NASA
tells ANN the Dawn spacecraft arrived at Astrotech Space Operations in
Titusville, FL at 0900 EDT Tuesday morning. 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, CA. "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.
As Aero-News has
reported, NASA scrapped the Dawn program in March 2006,
citing cost overruns and technical glitches. The program was given new life
weeks later, due in large part to protests from scientists and engineers at
JPL.
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.