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NASA, NOAA TO LAUNCH SATELLITE THAT WILL DETECT SOLAR
STORMS
An advanced environmental satellite equipped with
instruments to monitor Earth's weather and with a telescope that will be used to
forecast geomagnetic storms in space, is being prepared for launch from Cape
Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida.
The satellite, GOES-M, will monitor hurricanes, severe
thunderstorms, flash floods and other severe weather. It is the first of the
GOES satellites equipped with a Solar X-ray Imager to detect solar storms.
Liftoff of GOES-M, or Geostationary Operational
Environmental Satellite, is targeted for July 15 during a launch window that
opens at 2:59 a.m. EDT from Pad A at Complex 36. GOES-M will be launched on an
Atlas II rocket.
GOES satellites are the workhorses of weather forecasting
in the United States. The real-time weather data gathered by GOES satellites,
combined with data from Doppler radars and automated surface observing systems,
greatly aids weather forecasters in providing better warnings of severe weather.
The Solar X-ray Imager will take a full-disk image of the
Sun's atmosphere once every minute. The images will be used by NOAA and the U.S.
Air Force to monitor and forecast solar flares, coronal mass ejections, coronal
holes and active regions.
These features are the dominant sources of disturbances in
space weather that lead to geomagnetic storms. The ability to monitor and
forecast such events is valuable to operators and users of military and civilian
radio and satellite communications systems, navigation systems and power
networks, as well as to astronauts, high-altitude aviators and scientists.
"The SXI will provide the kind of improvements in
space weather forecasting that satellite imagery did for tracking
hurricanes," said Steven Hill, SXI Program Manager at NOAA’s Space
Environment Center in Boulder, Colorado.
The images taken by the Solar X-ray Imager will be
available in real time to the general public via the World Wide Web, through
NOAA’s National Geophysical Data Center in Boulder, Colo. When available, the
images will be at: http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov/stp/stp.html
The United States operates two GOES meteorological
satellites in geostationary orbit 22,300 miles over the Equator, one over the
East Coast and one over the West Coast. NOAA’s GOES-10 spacecraft, launched in
1997, is currently overlooking the West Coast out into the Pacific including
Hawaii; it is located at 135 degrees West longitude. GOES-8, launched in April
1994, is overlooking the East Coast out into the Atlantic Ocean and is
positioned at 75 degrees West.
"NASA is excited about providing another fine tool for the NOAA to use in
weather operations, including space weather forecasts," said Martin A.
Davis, GOES program manager at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in
Greenbelt, Md. "The launch of the GOES-M is the continuation of a 25-year
joint program between NASA and NOAA."
GOES-M will be stored on orbit ready for operation when
needed as a replacement for GOES-8 or -10. It joins GOES-11, also in storage.
"GOES-M will ensure continuity of GOES data, especially for the Atlantic
hurricane season," Dittberner said. The satellite will be renamed GOES-12
once reaching geostationary orbit.
NOAA's National Environmental Satellite, Data, and
Information Service operates the GOES series of satellites. After the satellites
complete on-orbit checkout, NOAA assumes responsibility for command and control,
data receipt, and product generation and distribution.
The Goddard Space Flight Center manages the design,
development and launch of the spacecraft for NOAA. NASA's Kennedy Space Center
in Florida is responsible for government oversight of launch operations and
countdown activities.
GOES-M, built by Space Systems/Loral, a subsidiary of
Loral Space and Communications Ltd., will be launched on an Atlas IIA rocket,
built by Lockheed Martin. The Solar X-ray imager was built by the Marshall Space
Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala. The on-board meteorological instruments for
GOES-L include an imager and a sounder manufactured by ITT Industries
Aerospace/Communications Division. The other instruments on GOES-M that will
monitor the space environment are: an Energetic Particle Sensor, a High Energy
Proton and Alpha Detector Monitor, X-ray Sensors and two magnetometers.
GOES information and imagery are available at: http://www.goes.noaa.gov
http://goes1.gsfc.nasa.gov
and http://rsd.gsfc.nasa.gov/goes/
Space weather information is available at: http://sec.noaa.gov
At the KSC Shuttle Landing
Facility, the GOES-M satellite is offloaded from the yawning
mouth of the C-5 aircraft. It will be transferred to Astrotech
in Titusville, Fla., for final testing. The GOES-M (Geostationary
Operational Environmental Satellite, I-M Series) provides
weather imagery and quantitative sounding data used to support
weather forecasting, severe storm tracking, and meteorological
research. The satellite is scheduled to be launched on an
Atlas-IIA booster, with a Centaur upper stage, July 12 from
Launch Pad 36-A, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.
At Astrotech, Titusville, Fla.,
a worker (right) turns the GOES-M satellite, bringing its side
into view. The GOES-M provides weather imagery and
quantitative sounding data used to support weather
forecasting, severe storm tracking and meteorological
research. The satellite is undergoing testing at Astrotech
before its scheduled launch July 12 on an Atlas-IIA booster,
Centaur upper stage from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.

Workers at Astrotech,
Titusville, Fla., observe the solar panel on the GOES-M
satellite as they open it. The GOES-M provides weather imagery
and quantitative sounding data used to support weather
forecasting, severe storm tracking and meteorological
research. The satellite is scheduled to launch July 12 on an
Atlas-IIA booster, Centaur upper stage from Cape Canaveral Air
Force Station.

The newest Geostationary
Operational Environmental Satellite-M (GOES-M) satellite is
rotated at Astrotech, in Titusville for the media who are
there to see the last in the current series of advanced
geostationary weather satellites in service. GOES-M has a new
instrument not on earlier spacecraft, a Solar X-ray Imager
that can be used in forecasting space weather, the effects of
solar storms that create electromagnetic disturbances on earth
that affect other satellites, communications and power grids.
GOES is scheduled to launch from Cape Canaveral Air Force
Station on an Atlas II rocket in July.
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