Thursday, March 16, 2017

SpaceX Falcon 9 - EchoStar XXIII

 SpaceX Falcon 9 Full Thrust - EchoStar XXIII - Launching March 16, 2017

Screenshot from SpaceX Webcast of the launch of EchoStar XXIII

Mission Rundown: SpaceX Falcon 9 FT - EchoStar XXIII

Written: January 28, 2021

Lift Off Time

March 16, 2017 - 06:00 UTC - 02:00 EDT

Mission Name

EchoStar XXIII

Launch Provider

SpaceX

Customer

EchoStar Corporation

Rocket

Falcon 9 Full Thrust serial number B1030

Launch Location

Kennedy Launch Complex 39A - LC-39A

Kennedy Space Center, Florida

Payload

SSL-1300 TV Broadcast Satellite

Payload mass

5 600 kg ~ 12 320 pounds

Where did the satellite go?

Geostationary Transfer Orbit to the 45o W slot

Initial orbit 179 km x 35 903 km x 22,43o - 633 minutes

Will they be attempting to recover the first stage?

No. One way ticket flying “bareback” with no grid fins or landing legs + hydraulic tanks, pumps...

Where will the first stage land?

In the Atlantic ocean east of Florida

Will they be attempting to recover the fairings?

No - Unknown - Maybe a test attempt?

Are these fairings new?

Yes - Two Type 1 boat hull sized fairings - 34 x 17 feet with 10 evenly spaced ventilation ports in a circle

This will be the:

– 31st flight of all Falcon 9 rockets

– 11th flight of Falcon 9 Full Trust “V1.2” booster 

– 2nd SpaceX launch from LC-39A

– 23th crash landing. Soft, hard, deliberate, ups...

– 3rd mission for SpaceX in 2017

– 21st commercial launch from LC-39A since Jan 1986

Where to watch

Where to read more

SpaceX link

Want to know and learn more link go see Tim Dodd


Launch debriefing

(This is what happend)

T-00:17:27

Hosts:

T-00:00:03

T  00:00:00

T+00:01:18

T+00:02:44

-

T+00:02:55

T+00:03:33

T+00:00:00

T+00:00:00

T+00:08:32

T+00:26:07

T+00:26:18

-

T+00:34:01

-

SpaceX live feed at 00:31

Lauren Lyons, Michael Hammersley and Tom Praderio

TEA-TAB ignition - Full thrust check

Liftoff at 18:00

MaxQ at 19:17

MECO 20:44, stage separation 20:47

Velocity 9 504 km/h - Alt. 73,4 km - Burn 166 seconds

SES-1 at 20:54 - Velocity 9 527 km/h - Altitude 84,6 km

Faring separation at 21:32

No Entry burn

No Landing burn

SECO at 26:31 and coasting at 26 719 km/h

SpaceX resumes live feed at 44:06

SES-2 - SECO-2 in 61 seconds at 44:17

No flight telemetry shown

SpaceX shows deployment at 52:00

Rap up from SpaceX at 52:54


A big satellite = A one way trip

SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket will deliver EchoStar XXIII, a commercial communications satellite for EchoStar Corporation, to a Geostationary Transfer Orbit (GTO).  SpaceX is targeting the launch of EchoStar XXIII from historic Launch Complex 39A (LC-39A) at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The two and a half hour launch window reopens on Thursday, March 16, at 1:34 a.m. EDT or 5:34 a.m. UTC.

The satellite will be deployed approximately 34 minutes after launch. SpaceX will not attempt to land Falcon 9’s first stage after launch due to mission requirements.

The Payload

EchoStar Corporation is an American company, a worldwide provider of satellite communication and Internet services through its Hughes Network Systems and EchoStar Satellite Services business segments.

On January 31, 2017, EchoStar announced that it had reached an agreement with DISH to transfer the EchoStar Technologies businesses, which designed, developed and distributed digital set-top boxes, provided satellite uplinking and broadcast services and developed and supported streaming video technology back to DISH. The transaction was completed on January 31, 2017, substantially returning DISH to its pre-2008 status as a set-top-box hardware manufacturer.

In March 2017, after two delays caused by weather worries, SpaceX delivered EchoStar XXIII into orbit. The satellite was launched on a Falcon 9 Rocket and provided broadcast services for Brazil. Because EchoStar XXIII is a heavy satellite, this mission did not include a rocket landing post-takeoff, as it would require too much fuel.

This was the 21st time a purely commercial satellite was launched from pad 39A, which once served as the launch site for most of the 12 Saturn V Apollo missions and 82 of the 135 Space Shuttle flights. The previous CRS-10 launch was the first use of LC-39A.

EchoStar XXIII was constructed by Space Systems Loral (SSL), based on the SSL-1300 bus. The satellite was originally constructed as EchoStar XIII, or CMBStar, which was intended to be used under a partnership between EchoStar and the Chinese government to provide s-band mobile video broadcasting during the 2008 Summer Olympics. It failed to launch in time and was mothballed.

The EchoStar XXIII satellite was then recommissioned in 2014. The large antenna which would have served mobile users of the EchoStar XIII satellite has been replaced with four Ku-band antennas with thirty-two transponders, while the satellite is also able to offer S-band and Ka-band communications.

The satellite has a design life of fifteen years and will begin its service life in an orbital slot at a longitude of 45 degrees West. However, it is able to operate in any of EchoStar’s eight geosynchronous slots allotted to Ku-band broadcasting satellites.

Rare view of second stage LOX tank. Not much left. Enough to deorbit? T+29:00 and T+32:00

B1030 will after boosting EchoStar XXIII 9 504 km/h into orbit end its life in this hazard area

Author William Graham link

link

Coauthor/Text Retriever Johnny Nielsen

link to launch list


Sunday, February 19, 2017

SpaceX Falcon 9 - CRS-10

 SpaceX Falcon 9 Full Thrust - CRS-10 - Launching February 19, 2017

Screenshot from SpaceX Webcast of CRS-10 - Saturn V and Space Shuttles stomping ground

Mission Rundown: SpaceX Falcon 9 FT - CRS-10

Written: January 29, 2021

Lift Off Time

February 19, 2017 - 14:39:00 UTC - 09:39:00 EST

Mission Name

CRS-10

Launch Provider

SpaceX

Customer

NASA

Rocket

Falcon 9 Full Thrust serial number B1031-1

Launch Location

Historical Launch Complex 39A - LC-39A

Kennedy Space Center, Florida

Payload

Cargo Dragon serial number C112-1

Payload mass

2 490 kg ~ 5 490 pounds

Where are the Dragon going?

Low Earth Orbit to the International Space Station

Will they be attempting to recover the first stage?

Yes - The booster have fuel enough to return

Where will the first stage land?

LZ-1 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida

Will they be attempting to recover the fairings?

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

This will be the:

With this historic launch from LC-39A SpaceX have now taken its third launch pad into operational service.

With the initial use of SLC-40 and later use of SLC-4E in Vandenberg, SpaceX is now ramping up its launch cadence, but with the Amos-6 fire that was halted.

It took 5 months to get LC-39A ready for operational use while SLC-40 was being investigated, cleared and repairs started.

– 30th flight of all Falcon 9 rockets

– 10th flight of Falcon 9 Full Trust “V1.2” booster 

– 1st flight of Cargo Dragon capsule C112-1

– 95th launch from LC-39A - Saturn V - Space Shuttle

– 1st SpaceX launch from LC-39A

– 1st use of Falcon Heavy Erector “backbone” TEL

– 8th booster landing overall

– 3rd booster landing on LZ-1

– 2nd mission for SpaceX in 2017

Where to watch

Where to read more

SpaceX link

Want to know or learn more link go see Tim Dodd


Launch debriefing

(This is what happend)

T-00:19:27

Hosts:

-

T-00:00:02

T  00:00:00

T+00:01:19

T+00:02:23

T+00:02:37

T+00:02:46

T+00:03:13

T+00:06:38

T+00:07:44

T+00:09:25

T+00:10:25

T+00:12:52

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T+00:14:13

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T+94:33:00

666:22:00

672:07:00

SpaceX live feed at 00:31

Brian Mahlstedt, Tom Praderio, Kate Tice and John Federspiel are presenting this historical launch

TEA-TEB ignition - Full thrust check

Liftoff at 19:59 - 14:39:00 UTC - February 19, 2017

MaxQ at 21:18

MECO 22:22, stage separation 22:29

SES-1 at 22:36

Boost back burn at 22:46 3 Merlin 1D+ 42 seconds

Nose cone seen after separation at 23:12

Entry burn 26:37 by 3 Merlin 1D+ for 17 seconds

Landing burn 27:43 by 1 Merlin 1D+ for 34 seconds

SECO at 29:24 and coasting

Dragon C112-1 separation not shown at 30:25

Deployment of solar array at 32:50

SES-1 - SECO-1 taking 409 seconds gave a velocity boost from 5 820 km/h to 27 100 km/h ish - no data

Rap up from SpaceX at 34:12

Other events during this CRS-10 mission was:

Berthing with ISS Harmony Nadir airlock at 13:12 UTC

Released from ISS after 22-23 days at 09:11 UTC

Landed in Pacific Ocean near NCR Quest at 14:46 UTC



Houston. Falcon 9 is ready for liftoff

SpaceX is targeting a late morning launch of its tenth Commercial Resupply Services mission (CRS-10) from Launch Complex 39A (LC-39A) at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida. The instantaneous launch window is on for Saturday, February 18 at 14:39 UTC / 9:39 a.m. EST. Dragon will separate from Falcon 9’s second stage about 10 minutes after liftoff and attach to the station roughly two days later.

The CRS-10 mission will be SpaceX’s first launch from historic LC-39A at Kennedy Space Center. Following stage separation, the first stage of Falcon 9 will attempt to land at SpaceX’s Landing Zone 1 (LZ-1) at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida.

The Dragon Mission step by step

CRS-10 is part of the original order of twelve missions awarded to SpaceX under the Commercial Resupply Services contract. As of June 2016, a NASA Inspector General report had this mission manifested for November 2016. The launch was put on hold pending investigation of the pad explosion in September 2016, with a tentative date no earlier than January 2017, subsequently set for 18 February.

On 12 February 2017, SpaceX successfully completed a static fire test of the Falcon 9 engines on Pad 39A. An initial launch attempt on 18 February 2017 was scrubbed 13 seconds before its 15:01:32 UTC launch due to a thrust vector control system issue in the rocket's second stage, resulting in a 24-hour hold for launch no earlier than 19 February at 14:39 UTC. The faulty actuator was repaired at the launch pad overnight, and the rocket was returned to vertical approximately six hours before the scheduled launch time.

CRS-10 was launched from Kennedy Space Center Launch Complex 39 Pad A on 19 February 2017 at 14:39 UTC, the first launch from the complex since STS-135 on 8 July 2011, the last flight of the Space Shuttle program, and the first uncrewed mission from the site since the launch of the Skylab space station on 14 May 1973; this complex is also where the Apollo missions were launched.

Following the successful launch, the first stage went through a three-burn flyback and landed safely in Landing Zone 1, the first daytime landing of a Falcon rocket on land.

The Dragon C112-1 spacecraft rendezvoused with the International Space Station on 22 February, but its approach was automatically aborted by an on-board computer at 08:25 UTC when a data error was reported in its navigation system.

This is the first rendezvous aborted by a Dragon spacecraft. The problem was traced to an incorrect data value in the spacecraft's Global Positioning System, critical to operations as this data informs the vehicle of its relative position to the space station.

The abort resulted in a 24-hour hold on its approach. The error was corrected just in time, during which the spacecraft C112-1 entered a "racetrack" trajectory around the station to reset its approach. An error-free second attempt resulted in Dragon C112-1 being captured by the station's Canadarm2 on 23 February at 10:44 UTC, with berthing to the Harmony module taking place a few hours later at 13:12 UTC.

This abort was later revealed in a NASA Inspector General audit to have resulted from incompatibilities between NASA and SpaceX's software development processes.

The CRS-10 mission ended on 19 March 2017. The Dragon spacecraft C112-1 was detached from the International Space Station by Canadarm2 on 18 March 2017 at 21:20 UTC, moved to a stow position below the station where it stayed overnight, and was released at 09:11 UTC. Dragon C112-1 performed three departure burns to move it away from the station before conducting a final de-orbit burn at around 14:00 UTC. The spacecraft splashed down in the Pacific Ocean at 14:46 UTC, about 320 km (200 mi) southwest from Long Beach, California.

Dragon C112-1 returned 1.652 kg (3.642 lb) of material from the ISS, including research samples, science and crew equipment, and spacewalking hardware. Also removed from the station was 811 kg (1.788 lb) of external payload—including a MISSE module, the OPALS experiment, and Robotic Refueling Mission demonstration equipment—which was placed in Dragon's unpressurized trunk and disposed of when the trunk section burned up on re-entry.

View of a bare Dragon trunk width 3 payloads, no panel covers and capsule: NASA

If the trunk can be built with a spare heat shield under the Dragon’s own heat shield. The trunk is a “tin can”, so if two arms lift the spare shield out, spin it 180 degrees and pull it back, so the concave bottom becomes the blunt top. All the trunk needs now is avionics to keep it oriented, thrusters to correct the course and parachutes to soften the splash down.

Maybe it would be easier to launch a stack of heat shields on a dedicated supply mission to ISS, that could be fitted to the departing Dragon’s trunks one by one, so it would have the capability to return larger hardware payloads for parachute landing on American soil. With mounting a set of parachutes to the heatshield you have a “Return to Earth” capability, that can at least on paper give scientists a tool to retrieve large hardwares from space.

The Dragon Payload

NASA contracted the CRS-10 mission from SpaceX and therefore determined the primary payload, date/time of launch, and orbital parameters for the Dragon space capsule C112-1.

CRS-10 carried a total of 2.490 kg (5.490 lb) of cargo to the International Space Station, including 1.530 kg (3.373 lb) of pressurized cargo including packaging and 960 kg (2.116 lb) of unpressurized cargo. External payloads on the spacecraft C112-1 are the SAGE III Earth observation experiment and its Nadir Viewing Platform (NVP), and the U.S. Department of Defense's Space Test Program Houston 5 (STP-H5) package including the Raven navigation investigation and the Lightning Imaging Sensor. Some science payloads include ACME, LMM Biophysics, ZBOT, and CIR/Cool Flames.

SpaceX's CRS-10 lightest payload was the "first operational use” of the Autonomous Flight Safety System (AFSS) on "either of Air Force Space Command's Eastern or Western Ranges." AFSS is replacing "the ground-based mission flight control personnel and equipment with on-board Positioning, Navigation and Timing sources and decision logic.

The benefits of AFSS include increased public safety, reduced reliance on range infrastructure, reduced range spacelift cost, increased schedule predictability and availability, operational flexibility, and launch slot flexibility.” The system consists of software developed by NASA, the Air Force, and DARPA, to which SpaceX adds an additional software layer customized for its rocket. AFSS has flown on 13 previous Falcon 9 missions since CRS-6 in a so-called "shadow mode" for testing purposes.

Many “First” happened on this flight. I have counted five, of which the most important one was the approach abort caused by incorrect GPS data between ISS and Dragons computer programs. That is a milestone in my book. Another milestone is this fact:

26 launches from SLC-40 took place before it was destroyed in the Amos-6 fire. 

Author William Graham link

link

Coauthor/Text Retriever Johnny Nielsen

link to launch list


SpaceX - Eutelsat 36D

Screenshot from the launch of Eutelsat 36D. At last we get to see a normal GTO mission in daylight Mission Rundown: SpaceX Falcon 9 - Eutels...