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Contact: Allard
Beutel Susan
Hendrix Sally
Koris
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April 3, 2003
- RELEASE:
03-130
PIONEER NASA SPACECRAFT CELEBRATES 20 YEARS OF SERVICE NASA's
original Tracking and Data Relay Satellite (TDRS-1), launched from the
Space Shuttle Challenger (STS-6) in April 1983, went from almost being
"lost in space," to a remarkable example of the agency's 'can
do, never quit' attitude. On April 4, TDRS-1 celebrates 20 years of After
deployment, the spacecraft's upper stage failed. NASA engineers at the
Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) came to TDRS-1's rescue using the spacecraft's
tiny, one-pound TDRS-1 began life by opening a new era in NASA satellite communications. It tracked low Earth-orbiting satellites, enabling NASA to issues commands and receive telemetry through most of their orbit. Working solo, TDRS-1 provided more communication coverage, in support of the September 1983 Shuttle mission, than the entire network of NASA tracking stations had provided in all previous Shuttle missions. The second TDRS satellite was destroyed in the Challenger accident in January 1986, so TDRS-1 was left alone in orbit for several years to carry the load. In March 1992, NASA called on TDRS-1 to quickly aid the agency's Compton Gamma Ray Observatory (CGRO), when data recorders onboard the spacecraft failed. Engineers
constructed a ground station in Canberra, Australia to close the zone
of communications exclusion and minimize science data loss. Controllers
re-positioned TDRS-1 Other TDRS-1 firsts include: * First
satellite used to support Kennedy Space Center launches in the early 1990s,
returning real time telemetry; Due
to increasing orbit inclination, TDRS-1 was the first satellite able to
see both Poles. In cooperation with the National Science Foundation (NSF),
an uplink/downlink station for TDRS-1 was installed in January 1998 at
the exact South Pole. This terminal has given scientists at the NASA considered retiring the aging satellite in 1998, but instead allowed the NSF and others to use it for scientific, humanitarian and educational purposes. TDRS-1 was used in 1998 for a medical emergency at McMurdo Station. Its high-speed connectivity allowed scientists to conduct a telemedicine conference, allowing doctors in the U.S. to guide a welder through a real operation on a woman diagnosed with breast cancer. In 2000, TDRS-1 successfully supported an extended NSF/Coast Guard science expedition to the Gakal Ridge just below the North Pole. "We in the Space Network are extremely happy with the performance of TDRS-1 and look forward to many more 'firsts,'" said Dick Schonbachler, Mission Commitment Manager at GSFC. Since TDRS-1 entered service in 1983, NASA has placed nine TDRS into specific geosynchronous orbits. The first six were built by TRW. Boeing Satellite Systems built three enhanced satellites. The Space Network uses the TDRS System to relay data and communications from more than one dozen customers, including the Shuttle, International Space Station and the Hubble Space Telescope. For
more information about TDRS-1 and the TDRS System, on the Internet, visit: -end-
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