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Deep Space 1 Launch Rescheduled To October 1998
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- Subject: Deep Space 1 Launch Rescheduled To October 1998
- From: Ron Baalke <BAALKE@kelvin.jpl.nasa.gov>
- Date: Fri, 17 Apr 1998 17:45:25 GMT
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Douglas Isbell / Don Savage
Headquarters, Washington, DC April 17, 1998
(Phone: 202/358-1547)
John Watson
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA
(Phone: 818/354-5011)
RELEASE: 98-64
DEEP SPACE 1 LAUNCH RESCHEDULED TO OCTOBER
The planned July 1998 launch of NASA's Deep Space 1
technology validation mission from Cape Canaveral, FL, has been
rescheduled for October.
The delay is due to a combination of late delivery of the
spacecraft's power electronics system and an ambitious flight
software development schedule, which together leave insufficient
time to test the spacecraft thoroughly for a July launch.
The power electronics system regulates and distributes power
produced by not only the solar concentrator array, a pair of
experimental solar panels composed of 720 cylindrical Fresnel
lenses, but also by an on-board battery. Among many other
functions, it helps the solar array to operate at peak efficiency,
and ensures that the battery is able to cover temporary surges in
power needed so that the ion propulsion system (which needs
electricity for its basic operations) receives a steady power
supply.
"With a new launch date for this bold mission, we can be more
confident that we will be ready to fully exercise our payload of
important technologies," explained Chief Mission Engineer Dr. Marc
Rayman of NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL), Pasadena, CA.
"The entire DS1 team looks forward to this opportunity to make a
significant contribution to science missions of the future through
the capabilities we are testing on DS1."
Deep Space 1 is the first launch in NASA's New Millennium
program, a series of missions designed to test new technologies so
that they can be confidently used on science missions of the 21st
century. Among the 12 technologies the mission is designed to
validate are ion propulsion, autonomous optical navigation, a
solar power concentrator array and an integrated camera and
imaging spectrometer.
The earlier July launch period for DS1 allowed it to fly a
trajectory encompassing flybys of an asteroid, Mars and a comet.
By the end of May, the mission design team is scheduled to
finalize new target bodies in the Solar System for DS1 to
encounter based on an October launch date.
The New Millennium Program and Deep Space 1 are managed by
JPL for NASA's Office of Space Science, Washington, DC. JPL is a
division of the California Institute of Technology.
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