Wednesday, April 18, 2018

SpaceX Falcon 9 - TESS

  SpaceX Falcon 9 Block 4 - TESS - Launching April 18, 2018

Screenshot of SpaceX Falcon 9 B4 - TESS with Tim Dodd as host

Mission Rundown: SpaceX Falcon 9 Block 4 - TESS

Written: January 16, 2021

Lift Off Time

April 18, 2018 - 22:51:31 UTC - 18:51:31 EDT

Mission Name

TESS

Launch Provider

SpaceX

Customer

NASA

Rocket

Falcon 9 Block 4 serial number B1045-1

Launch Location

SLC 40 - Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida

Payload

Interstellar Science Satellite

Payload mass

362 kg ~ 789 pounds

Where did the satellite go?

High Earth Transfer Orbit HETO - 296 x 299 450 km and then by itself to 108 400 km x 376 300 km orbit

Will they be attempting to recover the first stage?

Yes - A boost break burn will stop it half way

Where will the first stage land?

OCISLY - Who’s only 302 km downrange

Will they be attempting to recover the fairings?

No? They “don't” have parachutes and RCS thrusters for an experimental ocean landing - Mixed messages

Are these fairings new?

Yes - Type 2 boat hull sized fairings - 34 x 17 feet with 8 evenly spaced ventilation ports in a circle

This will be the:

– 53rd flight of all Falcon 9 rockets

– 9th flight of Falcon 9 Block 4 rocket

– 7th maiden flight of Falcon 9 Block 4 rocket

– 32nd SpaceX launch from SLC-40

– 24th booster landing overall

– 8th mission for SpaceX in 2018

Where to watch

Where to read more

SpaceX link

Other: Tim Dodd on NASA TESS link


Launch debriefing

(This is what happend)

-

-

T-00:12:27

Host:

T 00:00:00

T+00:01:20

T+00:02:32

T+00:02:40

T+00:02:41

T+00:03:03

T+00:06:32

T+00:07:50

T+00:08:26

-

T+00:42:23

T+00:43:10

-

-

-

T+00:48:05

T+00:49:35

-

-

Pre Launch Run Down from 0:01 then Q&A

First mentioning of Boca Chica + Starship by Tim Dodd 

SpaceX live feed at 16:00

Lauren Lyons had her dinner early

Liftoff at 28:28

MaxQ at 29:48

MECO 31:00, stage separation 31:02

SES-1 at 31:08

Boost brake burn at 31:09 - 3 Merlin 1D# in 31 seconds

Faring separation at 31:31

Entry burn 35:00 by 3 Merlin 1D# for 21 seconds

Landing burn 36:18 by 1 Merlin 1D# for 33 seconds

SECO at 36:54 and coasting

Q&A with explanations until 1:10:45

SpaceX resumes live feed and shown at 1:10:51

SES-2 - SECO-2 taking 53 seconds gave a velocity boost from 26 433 km/h to 37 505 km/h at 1:11:38

From 7.34 km/s to over 10.42 km/s

Sadly the music from SpaceX is to loud until 1:15:47

SpaceX resumes live feed at 1:16:33 - voice first

SpaceX show deployment at 1:18:03

Rap up from Tim Dodd at 1:23:20

Both fairings lost at sea


If we stare long enough. Will we spot it?

SpaceX will launch a Falcon 9 booster with a Block 5 second stage to put the SES-12 communication satellite into a geostationary transfer orbit. TESS is the Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite and was manufactured by Orbital ATK and led by MIT to help search for exoplanets orbiting other stars.

SpaceX is launching a brand new, and quite possibly the last of block 4 Falcon 9's for NASA at 22:51​ UTC (6:51​ Eastern) out of Cape Canaveral Air Force Station's SLC-40.

SpaceX will be attempting to land this booster on "Of Course I still Love you." 

NASA TESS

The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) is a space telescope for NASA's Explorers program, designed to search for exoplanets using the transit method in an area 400 times larger than that covered by the Kepler mission.

It was launched on April 18, 2018, atop a Falcon 9 rocket and was placed into a highly elliptical 13.7-day orbit around the Earth. The first light image from TESS was taken on August 7, 2018, and released publicly on September 17, 2018.

Actual TESS orbit before first apogee burn according to Space-track and NORAD.

NORAD   SAT NAME     INTLDES      PERIOD        INCL    APOGEE         PERIGEE

43435        TESS           2018-038A   10244.32      29.54   299450 km      296 km

Over the course of the two-year primary mission, TESS is expected to ultimately detect about 1250 transiting exoplanets orbiting the targeted stars, and an additional 13 000 transiting planets orbiting additional stars in the fields that TESS observed.

As of 10 May 2020, TESS has identified 1835 candidate exoplanets, of which 46 have been confirmed so far. After the end of the primary mission around July 4, 2020, data from the prime mission will continue to be searched for planets, while the extended mission will continue to acquire additional data.

The primary mission objective for TESS is to survey the brightest stars near the Earth for transiting exoplanets over a two-year period. The TESS satellite uses an array of wide-field cameras to perform a survey of 85% of the sky. With TESS, it is possible to study the mass, size, density and orbit of a large cohort of small planets, including a sample of rocky planets in the habitable zones of their host stars. TESS will provide prime targets for further characterization by the James Webb Space Telescope, as well as other large ground-based and space-based telescopes of the future.

While previous sky surveys with ground-based telescopes have mainly detected giant exoplanets and the Kepler space telescope has mostly found planets around distant stars that are too faint for characterisation, TESS will find many small planets around the nearest stars in the sky. TESS records the nearest and brightest main sequence stars hosting transiting exoplanets, which are the most favorable targets for detailed investigations.


Artist impression of the TESS satellite in deep space

TESS uses a novel highly elliptical orbit around the Earth with an apogee approximately at the distance of the Moon and a perigee of 108 000 km. TESS orbits Earth twice during the time the Moon orbits once, a 2:1 resonance with the Moon. The orbit is expected to remain stable for a minimum of ten years.

Led by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology with seed funding from Google, on April 5, 2013, it was announced that TESS, along with the Neutron Star Interior Composition Explorer (NICER), had been selected by NASA for launch.

Author Tim Dodd link

Coauthor/Text Retriever Johnny Nielsen

link to launch list


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