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New Horizons Update - January 9, 2006



 
 
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Old January 9th 06, 05:12 PM posted to sci.space.news
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Default New Horizons Update - January 9, 2006

http://pluto.jhuapl.edu/overview/piP...e_current.html

The PI's Perspective
Alan Stern
Free Bird
January 9, 2006

The past two weeks have been pretty quiet for our intrepid spacecraft.
For the most part, she has slept, unpowered, while launch vehicle and
ground system preparations have continued. About the only real action
came on Jan. 3, when the final flight parameter loads were installed in
the twind computers New Horizons carries within her hull.

The next two weeks will be more exciting. Our launch date remains on
course for Jan. 17. That's just over a week from now. And whether we
fly
that day, or the next, or the next - in fact, whenever we launch - the
mighty Atlas V//STAR-48 propulsion stack will hurl New Horizons to a
speed greater than any spacecraft has ever reached when leaving Earth.

Indeed, New Horizons will be traveling so fast after launch that she
will cross the orbit of the Moon just 9 hours after crossing over the
Atlantic beaches in Florida. That roughly 1/3-day trip makes Apollo's
3-day lunar trek's seem almost quaint.

One thing I have never seen described is our planned suite of early
activities on New Horizons. Simply put, we will spend the first month
"out of the box" checking out spacecraft subsystems and flight
software,
fine tuning the flight trajectory to Jupiter, and preparing for the
instrument commissioning activities that begin about five weeks after
liftoff.

If you are looking for playbook, here's a more detailed list of
planned,
major activities during our first three weeks on the road to Pluto:

o Day 1: First contact, command to flight mode, configure thermal
control,
Inertial Measurement Units (IMUs) on, "burp" and prime the propulsion
lines.
o Day 2: Thermal management and guidance system checkouts.
o Days 3-8: Navigation system and sensor checks, guidance system
checks,
tracking to refine spacecraft trajectory.
o Day 9: First trajectory correction.
o Day 11: Second trajectory correction (if needed).
# Days 12-19: Additional guidance and navigation system checks,
spacecraft
trajectory refinement.
o Day 20: LORRI and PEPSSI instruments, communications and power
checks.
o Day 21: Third trajectory correction (if needed).

Throughout this entire period, New Horizons will be tracked 24x7 by
NASA's Deep Space Network (DSN) of antenna stations. Mission
controllers
will be "at the spacecraft's side" every moment during these crucial
early days.

Everyone on the project is looking forward to New Horizons being under
way, a free bird, at home in zero-gravity and the clear, clean vacuum
of
space where she was meant to thrive - hurtling outbound to a date with
the ninth planet about nine years hence.

Stay tuned for more updates on this page as launch approaches and we
get
under way with the flight mission.

 




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