Tuesday, May 22, 2012

SpaceX Falcon 9 - COTS C2+

  SpaceX Falcon 9 V1.0 - COTS C2+  - Launching May 22, 2012

Screenshot from SpaceX Webcast of the launch of COTS-2+

Mission Rundown: SpaceX Falcon 9 V1.0 - COTS C2+

Written: February 6, 2021

Lift Off Time

May 22, 2012 - 07:44:38 UTC - 03:44:38 EST

Mission Name

COTS C2+

Launch Provider

SpaceX

Customer

NASA

Rocket

Falcon 9 V1.0 serial number B0005

Launch Location

Space Launch Complex 40 (SLC-40) at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida

Payload

Experimental Cargo Dragon serial number C102

Payload mass

525 kg ~ 1 157 pounds

Where are the Dragon going?

Low Earth Orbit to the International Space Station

Will they be attempting to recover the first stage?

No. It’s a regularly rocket - One way ticket only

Where will the first stage land?

The Atlantic ocean east of North Carolina

Will they be attempting to recover the fairings?

No. The Dragon capsule has a jettisonable nose cone and solar panel covers on the Trunk

This will be the:

– 3rd flight of Falcon 9 V1.0 rocket

– 3rd SpaceX launch from SLC-40

– 3rd crash landing. Soft, hard, deliberate, ups...

– 1st mission for SpaceX in 2012

– 52nd unmanned resupply mission to dock with ISS

– 123rd spacecraft to launch towards ISS

Where to watch

Where to read more

SpaceX link

The launch from NASA plus Press conference

Just the launch from The Pvpness

Want to know or learn more link visit Tim Dodd


Launch debriefing

(This is what happend)

Be aware that rocket based inflight video is delayed 3-4 seconds due to signal relays

T-00:44:20

Hosts:

T 00:00:00

T+00:01:25

T+00:02:52

T+00:03:03

T+00:03:15

T+00:03:55

T+00:08:22

T+00:09:27

T+00:10:00

T+00:11:38

-

-

T+80:17:22

218:04:22

223:57:22

SpaceX webcast at 00:16 - Clock unstable til 35:50

Jessica Jensen, John Insprucker and Kevin Brogan

Liftoff at 44:33 - 07:44:38 UTC - May 22, 2012

MaxQ at 45:57

MECO engine 1 and 9 at 47:24

MECO engine 2-8 at 47:36, stage separation 47:40

SES-1 at 47:48

Nose cone separation at 48:28 - Unseen

Exhaust illuminated by sunlight at 52:54

SECO at 53:59 - Belching and coasting

Dragon deployment  at 54:33

Solar Cell panels deployment at 56:10

Rap up from SpaceX at 58:22

Other events during this COTS C2+ mission were:

Berthing with ISS Harmony Nadir airlock at 16:02 UTC

Released from ISS after 6 days at 09:49 UTC

Landed in Pacific Ocean near NRC Quest at 15:42 UTC


Getting close to catch a Dragon’s tooth?

The third SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket successfully orbited the company's first fully functional Dragon spacecraft on the COTS C2+ Demonstration Mission for NASA on May 22, 2012.  The two stage, kerosene fueled rocket lifted off from Cape Canaveral Space Launch Complex 40 at 07:44 UTC, beginning an ambitious mission that, if fully implemented, would see the spacecraft docked to the International Space Station for two weeks. 

It was Falcon 9's first night launch. The liftoff ended a 17 month hiatus for the launch vehicle as SpaceX worked to prepare Dragon for the C2+ mission.

Red flight path of Falcon 9 first stage - It’s a nighttime launch 51,6 degree along the east coast

Falcon 9's first stage burned for three minutes, its second stage for an additional 6 minutes 14 seconds, to inject Dragon into a 297 x 346 km x 51.6 deg phasing orbit.  Dragon's twin solar arrays, on their inaugural flight, deployed shortly after spacecraft separation.  The arrays were attached to Dragon's "trunk", an aft module attached to the cone shaped spacecraft that was also on its first fully configured flight.  

The launch occurred three days after a last launch abort that was caused by a faulty helium purge check valve on the launcher's center Merlin 1C engine no. 5.

Crews identified the problem and replaced the valve while Falcon 9 remained vertical on the pad. Which means there is room enough between the engines for minor repairs, but it’s suspected that this is a two man repair job with no propellant loaded.

The Dragon Payload

Dragon carried 525 kg of demonstration cargo for ISS. Plans call for it to return 620 kg of cargo when it reenters and splashes down in the Pacific Ocean. But the ISS docking is contingent on Dragon successfully completing a series of demonstration maneuvers for NASA during the first two days of its mission, before it will be allowed to approach ISS for a capture and the following berthing.

It is the first visit by a commercial spacecraft to the International Space Station. At this point in the flight, Dragon C2 had begun to demonstrate objectives originally intended for the following standalone "C3" mission. It was now COTS C2+.

ISS crew successfully captured the SpaceX Dragon C2+ spacecraft at 13:56 UTC on May 25, 2012, after a slight delay due to a LIDAR issue.  The 5-7 tonne spacecraft (SpaceX had not revealed its dry mass) was subsequently berthed to the ISS Harmony module earth facing Nadir airlock at 16:02 UTC.

The pressurized section carried 525 kg (1,157 lb) of cargo to the ISS, which included food, water, clothing, cargo bags, computer hardware, the NanoRacks Module 9 (student experiments and scientific gear) and other miscellaneous cargo. No unpressurized cargo was delivered on this mission.

An unannounced addition to the cargo manifest, made public after the launch, was a small canister, affixed to the second stage's top, containing the 1-gram ash remains of over 300 people including Project Mercury Astronaut Gordon Cooper, and James Doohan, the actor who played Scotty on the television show Star Trek in the 1960s.

The remains were flown semi-secretly by Celestis, a company that has flown burial canisters in the past on SpaceX's Falcon 1 launch vehicle. The second stage and the burial canister remained in the initial orbit Dragon C2+ was inserted to, and burned up in the Earth's atmosphere a month later.

On its return to Earth, Dragon brought back 665 kg (1,466 lb) worth of pressurized cargo back to Earth; the cargo included experiment samples, experiment hardware, ISS' systems hardware and Extravehicular Mobility Unit hardware.

One of the experiments returned by Dragon was the Shear History Extensional Rheology Experiment (SHERE) administered by NASA's Glenn Research Center.

Another experiment returning with Dragon was the Multi-user Droplet Combustion Apparatus (MDCA), and the Combustion Integrated Rack-Fluids and Combustion Facility (CIR). The return flight was planned to carry 660 kg (1,460 lb).

Another experiment returning on this mission was the Material Science Research Rack (MSRR), which investigated microgravity experiments on aluminum-alloy rods.

Four hours after Dragon left the station, it began to conduct its nine-minute-long deorbit burn. The Dragon capsule jettisoned its trunk and re-enter Earth's atmosphere. Its heat shield protected it during most of the re-entry and when low enough in altitude its two drogue parachutes were deployed, followed by its three main parachutes.

Screenshot of an recovered Dragon CRS-6 on the deck of Go Searcher in the Pacific Ocean

The Dragon capsule splashed down into the Pacific Ocean about 900 km (560 mi) from the Baja Peninsula at approximately 11:42 EDT (15:42 UTC) on May 31, 2012 and was recovered by a small fleet of recovery vessels from the contractor hired by SpaceX, American Marine.

Dragon had departed the International Space Station about 5.5 hours earlier, at 08:07 UTC. The reentry and splashdown ended Dragon's COTS C2+ demonstration mission for NASA, opening the way for official commercial cargo flights for NASA.

Author William Graham link

link

Coauthor/Text Retriever Johnny Nielsen

link to launch list


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