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Advanced
Communications Satellite Soars Into Night Sky
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| Rocket
launch of TDRS-J |
NASA's third
Tracking and Data Relay Satellite-J, TDRS-J, lifted off from Cape
Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla. at 9:42 p.m. EST aboard an Atlas
IIA rocket. Spacecraft separation from the Centaur stage occurred
at 10:12 p.m. Boeing controllers made initial contact with TDRS-J
at 10:41 p.m. EST as the spacecraft passed over NASA's ground station
in Canberra Australia.
"We couldn't
be more pleased with this evening's launch," said Robert
Jenkens Jr., TDRS Project Manager at Goddard. "Controllers
have already made contact with TDRS-J and all seems well. My congratulations
to everyone who helped make this launch a success."
During the next
eight days, a series of orbit raising maneuvers will boost the 7,039-pound
(3,196-kilogram) satellite into a geosynchronous orbit 22,300 miles
above the Earth's equator.
Boeing Satellite
Systems of El Segundo, Calif., which built the trio of enhanced
satellites for NASA under a fixed-price contract, will command TDRS-J
through completion of transfer orbit maneuvers, appendage deployments,
acquisition of Earth pointing in geostationary orbit and pre-acceptance
testing using NASA's Deep Space Network.
TDRS-J will
provide users with improved multiple access, S-band single access,
as well as a new Ka-band service. This second generation TDRS will
help replenish the original six TDRS, which have provided reliable
communications support to the Space Shuttle and numerous Earth-orbiting
science missions since 1983.
For additional
information about TDRS-H, -I and -J, go to: http://tdrs.gsfc.nasa.gov/Tdrsproject/
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