Category: Civil

Orbital Delays Antares Launch By at Least One Day

Orbital Delays Antares Launch By at Least One Day

Orbital Sciences Corporation’s demonstration flight of its Antares rocket and Cygnus spacecraft to the International Space Station will be delayed by at least one day, from September 17 to September 18.

The company and NASA each announced this afternoon that the launch was being postponed because weather at the Wallops Flight Facility yesterday delayed the roll-out of the rocket to the pad and because of a technical issue that developed during a test last night.

Orbital’s tweets and press release about the roll-out yesterday made no mention of delays for any reason, including weather.  The first mention is in a statement on the company’s website now where it states that the launch will be delayed “by at least 24 hours” because of the roll-out delay and the technical problem — an inoperative cable that disrupted communications between the rocket’s flight computer and ground equipment. 

The cable is being replaced and another test will take place later today.   If the test is successful, Orbital will proceed with plans to launch on September 18.  The launch window that day is 10:50-11:05 am Eastern Daylight Time.

This flight is Orbital’s demonstration mission as part of NASA’s Commercial Orbital Transportation Services (COTS), or commercial cargo, program.  The Cygnus spacecraft is intended to berth with the International Space Station.   If the launch occurs on September 18, the date for berthing remains the same — Sunday, September 22. 

 

 

Launch Fever Starts Overnight Tonight – Four Key Launches Coming Up – UPDATE 4

Launch Fever Starts Overnight Tonight – Four Key Launches Coming Up – UPDATE 4

UPDATE 4: September 15, 2013, 10:30 am ET:   This will be the last update for this article.  Check back at SpacePolicyOnline.com for further information on the launches that have not yet occurred.   This morning, Elon Musk tweeted that the Falcon 9 v1.1 launch was being delayed until September 29 or 30.

UPDATE 3: September 14, 2013, 3:30 pm ET:  The Antares launch has slipped at least one day, from September 17 to September 18.

UPDATE 2: September 14, 2013, 8:05 am ET:  Japan succeeded in launching its new Epsilon rocket at 1:00 am EDT this morning (2:00 pm Japan Standard Time).

UPDATE:  September 13, 2013, 4:25 pm ET.   As we said, launch dates can always slip, and SpaceX’s already has.  The Canadian Space Agency, whose CASSIOPE satellite will be aboard the rocket, tweeted and updated its website about 4:00 pm EDT to say the launch has been delayed to a “later date.”  We’ve updated the link about the SpaceX launch to a story we just posted about the launch, including the postponement.

ORIGINAL STORY: September 13, 2013.  Four especially important space launches are on tap in the next several days beginning overnight tonight Eastern Daylight Time (EDT).   Japan, the United States and Russia all have a lot riding on the outcome of these events.

First up is Japan’s second attempt to launch its new Epsilon rocket.   That is scheduled for 12:45 am EDT Saturday (in the wee hours overnight  tonight, but officially tomorrow).  It will be mid-afternoon local time at the launch site in Ucihnoura, Japan — 1:45 pm Japan Standard Time.  The launch window is open for 45 minutes. 

Next up on Sunday, according to the latest rumors, will be SpaceX’s first launch of a new version its Falcon 9 rocket, the Falcon 9 v1.1.   It also will be the first SpaceX launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base, CA.    SpaceX has released little information, but a NASA launch manifest currently shows the launch on Sunday, September 15, between 1600-1800 Z (12:00 pm -2:00 pm EDT, or 9:00-11:00 am local time at the launch site).   [Other sources also report that this is the launch date and time, but H/T to @Jeff_Foust for pointing out this NASA manifest, which is the most official of those sources.]

On Tuesday, September 17,  Orbital Sciences Corporation is planning the first flight of its Antares rocket with a Cygnus spacecraft to the International Space Station.  This is Orbital’s demonstration launch for NASA’s Commercial Orbital Transportation Services (COTS) program.  Launch is from NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility on the coast of Virginia at 11:16 am EDT.

Last is the return-to-flight of Russia’s Proton rocket.  The launch date is uncertain.  It was to have taken place on Sunday, but has been postponed while engineers check out an anomalous reading detected in the rocket’s first stage earlier this week.

Obviously all launch dates and times are subject to change due to weather or technical considerations.

In summary, these four very important launches are expected to take place as follows:

  • SATURDAY, 12:45 am EDT/1:45 pm Japan Standard Time.  First launch of JAXA’s Epsilon rocket, Uchinoura, Japan
  • SUNDAY, 12:00 – 2:00 pm EDT/9:00-11:00 am Pacific Daylight Time.   First launch of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 v1.1, Vandenberg Air Force Base, CA
  • TUESDAY, 11:16 am EDT.   First launch of Orbital Sciences Corp.’s Antares rocket with Cygnus spacecraft to International Space Station, Wallops Island, VA
  • TBD.   Return to flight of Russia’s Proton rocket, Baikonur, Kazakhstan (was scheduled for Sunday, but last minute anomalous reading being investigated)
SpaceX Readies New Falcon 9 v1.1 for Launch, But Date Still Uncertain

SpaceX Readies New Falcon 9 v1.1 for Launch, But Date Still Uncertain

SpaceX is getting ready for the first launch of its new version of the Falcon 9, the Falcon 9 v1.1, carrying a Canadian scientific satellite and five smaller satellites.  SpaceX is being cautious about announcing a launch date, and until moments ago indicators were that it would be on Sunday.  One of the customers announced about 4:00 pm Eastern Daylight Time (EDT), however, that the launch has been postponed to an unspecified “later date.”

SpaceX’s website makes no mention of the launch (at least we cannot find anything).   The FAA granted a safety waiver for the launch last month and identified September as the launch time frame.  This is SpaceX’s first launch from Vandenberg Air Force Base, CA and the waiver was needed because of weather conditions common off the California coast in September.

Other sources have suggested various dates for the launch, but the most official indications have come from two of the customers and a NASA launch manifest, all of which were showing Sunday, September 15, as the launch date until moments ago.   The planned launch time apparently was 12:00 noon Eastern Daylight Time (EDT), or 9:00 am Pacific Daylight Time (PDT) at the launch site.

The main payload is the Canadian Space Agency’s (CSA’s) Cascade SmallSat and Ionospheric Polar Explorer (CASSIOPE) satellite to study the space environment and demonstrate telecommunications technology.  CSA issued a press release earlier today stating that the launch was scheduled for Sunday at 12:00 noon EDT.  Another customer, the University of Colorado-Boulder, already had announced that the launch would be on September 15.  Students at UC-Boulder built one of the five smaller satellites that will be launched along with CASSIOPE.   The Drag and Atmospheric Neutral Density Explorer (DANDE) satellite will study the Earth’s thermosphere.   A NASA manifest of launches of interest to the agency also shows September 15 as the launch date, with the time listed as 1600-1800Z, which would be 12:00-2:00 pm EDT, consistent with the CSA announcement.

Meanwhile, however, SpaceX founder and CTO Elon Musk (@elonmusk) tweeted at 2:04 EDT this morning (Friday) that anomalies were detected during a static fire test yesterday and the launch date is “TBD.”   At about 4:00 pm EDT, CSA tweeted (@csa_asc) and updated its website with the message that the launch “is delayed to a later date.”

Jeff Foust reports in his NewSpace Journal blog that SpaceX officials speaking the AIAA’s Space 2013 conference over the past few days emphasized that the Falcon 9 v1.1 is “trying a lot of things for the first time” and is “a bit of a nail-biter.”

House Postpones Vote on FY2014 CR Till Next Week

House Postpones Vote on FY2014 CR Till Next Week

The House will postpone until next week its vote on a FY2014 Continuing Resolution (CR) to keep the government operating after September 30.   The CR was introduced last night and a vote was expected tomorrow, but Republicans reportedly need more time to convince their own members to support the bill.

The bill, H. J. Res. 59, would keep the government operating at current levels — including the sequester — until December 15, 2013.  For space programs, the only exception was made for NOAA’s Joint Polar Satellite System (JPSS) and Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite-R (GOES-R) weather satellite programs, which would be funded sufficiently to ensure their launch dates do not slip.  The total amount of funding in the bill is $986.3 billion.

Democrats oppose the bill because they obkect to the sequester and because an associated House rule would require the Senate to vote on a separate bill to defund Obamacare before voting on the CR.  It does not require the Senate to agree to defund Obamacare, only that a vote take place according to The Hill newspaper.

Some House Republicans oppose the bill because it does not tie the fate of FY2014 federal funding to delaying or defunding Obamacare more directly.  They want the CR itself to include Obamacare defunding rather than allowing two separate votes.   Enough House Republicans oppose the bill that the House leadership decided to postpone action until next week.  They will use the extra time to try and convince enough of their own members to vote aye to ensure passage of the bill, since they do not expect any favorable Democratic votes.   Those House Republicans do not want the government to shut down for lack of funding for fear it will hurt their chances of retaining control of the House in next year’s elections.

 

Three ISS Crew Returning Home Tonight – UPDATE

Three ISS Crew Returning Home Tonight – UPDATE

UPDATE, Sept. 10, 2013, 11:00 pm EDT:   Soyuz TMA-08M landed as expected at 10:58 pm EDT (8:58 am September 11 local time at the landing site in Kazakhstan).

ORIGINAL STORY:  Three International Space Station (ISS) crew members undocked from the space station at 7:35 pm Eastern Daylight Time (EDT) and are on schedule to land at 10:58 pm EDT.

NASA astronaut Chris Cassidy and two Russian cosmonauts, Pavel Vinogradov and Alexander Misurkin, are returning home in their Soyuz TMA-08M spacecraft.  They arrived at the ISS on March 28.   So far the landing is going according to plan.   They will land in Kazakhstan, which is 10 hours ahead of EDT, so the local landing time will be 8:58 am September 11.

Three ISS crew members — NASA astronaut Karen Nyberg, European Space Agency astronaut Luca Parmitano, and Russian cosmonaut Fyodor Yurchikhin — remain aboard the space station awaiting three new colleagues who are scheduled for launch on September 25.  The new crew members are NASA astronaut Mike Hopkins and Russian cosmonauts Oleg Kotov and Sergey Ryazanskiy.

GAO: SLS Will Cost $7 Billion in Next 5 Years, Part of Total $44 Billion Government Spending on Launch

GAO: SLS Will Cost $7 Billion in Next 5 Years, Part of Total $44 Billion Government Spending on Launch

A Government Accountability Office (GAO) report released today reveals that DOD and NASA plan to spend a total of about $44 billion on space launch activities over the next 5 years and $7 billion of that is for developing NASA’s Space Launch System (SLS). 

GAO explains that today’s report  (a two page letter followed by a set of briefing charts) is only a first step in responding to a request from the House Homeland Security Committee on impediments to economical procurement of government launch vehicles and services.   This report presents data on how much DOD and NASA plan to spend in FY2014-2018 on procurement and on research, development, test and evaluation (RDT&E) related to launch vehicles and services.  It makes no recommendations.

Using “then-year” dollars, which are adjusted for expected inflation, GAO found that DOD and NASA plan to spend “nearly $44 billion” over that time period, of which about $28 billion (65 percent) is for procurement and approximately $11 billion (26 percent) is for RDT&E.  The rest is for “other,” such as personnel and facilities.

Procurement funding is split $16 billion for DOD and $12 billion for NASA.  DOD’s costs are largely for procurement of Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle (EELV) services for national security satellites.  NASA’s figure includes funding not only to launch its own satellites and for commercial crew launches, but launching weather satellites for NOAA.

RDT&E spending is split $719 million for DOD and $10.5 billion for NASA.  Of NASA’s $10.5 billion, $7 billion is for the Space Launch System and associated ground systems. 

GAO does not specify how much of the RDT&E funding is for commercial crew, but notes that NASA’s RDT&E funding drops “steeply, over $300 million from FY 16 to FY 17, largely due to decreased funding for the Commercial Crew Program…..”   It also says that NASA could not separate launch costs from International Space Station cargo and crew transportation costs so GAO included all cargo and crew transportation costs.

Space Policy Events for the Week of September 9-13, 2013

Space Policy Events for the Week of September 9-13, 2013

The following activities may be of interest in the week ahead.  Congress returns to work this week with a full plate of issues to resolve. 

During the Week

Syria tops the issues Congress will grapple with as it returns to work after its summer recess, but passing a Continuing Resolution (CR) to fund the government after September 30 is also on the docket.   The content of the CR is the subject of many rumors starting with how long it will last (weeks or months) and whether it will hold agencies to their FY2013 funding levels, the funding levels in the House-passed budget resolution (which are lower), the funding levels in the Senate-passed budget resolution (which are higher), or something in between.   Congress often compromises on the “something in between” level.  We may get a hint later this week; some reports suggest that the House could take up a CR on Thursday.

NASA still has not released its FY2013 operating plan, which details how the money it was allocated for FY2013 as adjusted for the sequester and two rescissions will be distributed among its various programs, projects and activities.  SpacePolicyOnline.com was able to obtain top level numbers from NASA last week and we updated our FY2013 and FY2014 budget fact sheets accordingly, but the next tier of detail is available only for planetary science based on a presentation by planetary science division director Jim Green to the NRC’s Committee on Astrobiology and Planetary Science (CAPS) a few days ago (which we also added to our fact sheets).  We continue to try to get NASA to release the more detailed figures for other parts of the Science Mission Directorate and the rest of NASA.

In other matters, three International Space Station crew members are set to return home on Tuesday night; SpaceX is gearing up for its first launch of a new version of the Falcon 9 rocket — v1.1 — from Vandenberg Air Force Base, though it has not announced the date so it may or may not occur this week (so it’s not listed below); and there are meetings and conferences from Washington, D.C. to Wailea, Hawaii as shown below.

Tuesday, September 10

Tuesday-Thursday, September 10-12

Tuesday-Friday, September 10-13

Thursday, September 12

DalBello Headed to OSTP

DalBello Headed to OSTP

Richard DalBello will begin his new job at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) on September 23.  His appointment has been rumored for several weeks.

DalBello has a long history of government and private sector experience in the space business.   Currently he is Vice President of Government Affairs for Intelsat General.  

He will be OSTP’s Assistant Director, Aeronautics and Space, the same position he held for four years of the Clinton Administration.

Among his previous government jobs, he worked at the congressional Office of Technology Assessment, for NASA as director of commercial communications where he was responsible for private sector experiments on the Advanced Communications Technology Satellite (ACTS), and for the Department of Commerce as Director of the Office of Space Commercialization.  He also worked on the staff of the 1985-1986 National Commission on Space.    In the private sector, he was president of the Satellite Broadcasting and Communications Association, president of the Satellite Industry Association, general counsel of Spotcast Communications Inc., and Vice President for Government Affairs, North America for ICO Global Communications. 

He has a B.S. in political science from the University of Illinois, a master’s degree in law from McGill University, and a J.D. from the University of San Francisco.

Farewell Message from Lori Garver to NASA Workforce

Farewell Message from Lori Garver to NASA Workforce

Following is the text of a message from NASA Deputy Administrator Lori Garver to the NASA workforce.  Today is Garver’s last day at the agency.  On Monday, she will become General Manager of the Air Line Pilots Association.  This farewell message was distributed by NASA.

Farewell Message to the NASA Workforce

It has been a great privilege to serve as your Deputy Administrator. As I close out this term of service, I want to express my gratitude to the entire NASA family for your efforts and achievements. Together we have undergone a transformation that is already building a more sustainable and beneficial 21st Century space agency. We’ve worked to align NASA with the critical national objectives of economic growth, technology innovation, environmental stewardship, cutting edge science and global leadership.

Throughout my career, I have been honored to serve NASA in several different positions. When I arrived in early November, 2008 as the lead for the Obama transition, we were facing many critical issues as an agency. Transitions are hard, and NASA’s was no exception. Thankfully, there were many of you who reached out to help us understand this amazing institution and worked with us to advance the agency.

We were able to immediately extend Space Shuttle flights for two additional missions in order to gain the knowledge from the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer and to fully outfit the International Space Station until we would again be transporting cargo and crew with U.S. vehicles from U.S. soil. We created NASA’s growing space technology effort, increased innovation in aeronautics Earth and space science, launched carried out the Mars Science Lab mission, broadened international cooperation and forged new private sector partnerships in areas such as sub-orbital science, hosted payloads, lunar robotics, asteroid detection and space transportation.

These changes have allowed NASA to deliver better science, and more advanced technologies to sustain its global leadership position now and for the future.

Internally, we worked to spearhead critical initiatives in the areas of early career hiring, more productive relationships with our labor unions, diversity and transparency. Our priority for NASA has been to continually deliver cutting edge, cost efficient, successful, relevant missions that will keep the United States at the forefront of aeronautics, environmental monitoring, space science, and exploration.

On Monday, I start my new job as General Manager of the Air Line Pilots Association. As I take on this new challenge of assisting pilots and advancing the nation’s critical aviation industry, I take with me the inspiration and spirit that is embodied in NASA.

Thank you for the opportunity to be a part of the family.

Lori

LADEE Launches on Schedule, On Its Way to the Moon

LADEE Launches on Schedule, On Its Way to the Moon

It was a picture perfect launch for NASA’s Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer (LADEE) tonight.

Launch from Wallops Flight Facility on the coast of Virginia was on time at 11:27 pm Eastern Daylight Time.  The Minotaur V rocket performed as expected and LADEE is on its way to the Moon.  

It is using an unusual method to reach the Moon.  Instead of flying there directly like the Apollo missions, it was placed into an elliptical Earth orbit.   The apogee of the orbit (point furthest from Earth) will be raised through three “phasing loops” until it is so close to the Moon that the spacecraft will be captured by the Moon’s gravity.  A braking rocket then will fire to put LADEE into lunar orbit.  The process will take about a month.