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NASA, ULA Launch NOAA's
Newest Earth Observing Satellite
March 1, 2022
NASA successfully
launched the third in a series of next-generation
weather satellites for the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) at 4:38 p.m. EST
Tuesday. The newest Geostationary Operational
Environmental Satellite, GOES-T, launched on a
United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket from Cape
Canaveral Space Force Station.
GOES-T mission managers
confirmed at 8:28 p.m. the spacecraft's solar arrays
successfully deployed and the spacecraft was
operating on its own power.
"We at NASA are proud to
support our joint agency partner, NOAA, and their
mission to provide critical data and imagery to
forecasters and researchers tracking hazardous
weather," said NASA Deputy Administrator Pam Melroy.
"While the GOES-R series satellites' main job is to
help with weather prediction, these satellites
produce observations that also help with NASA
science. Our agencies' collaboration brings great
benefits toward understanding our planet."
The satellite will provide
continuous coverage of weather and hazardous
environmental conditions in the Western Hemisphere.
The GOES program also predicts space weather near
Earth that can interfere with satellite electronics,
GPS, and radio communications.
"We at NASA feel honored to
continue to work with NOAA on this strategic and
successful partnership. Besides our work on
spacecraft development and launch, NASA supported
science teams are looking forward to analyzing the
precious data that GOES-T will provide," said Thomas
Zurbuchen, the associate administrator for the
Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in
Washington. "These observations are a key part of
our research towards improving understanding and
models of climate, weather, and space weather –
models that, in turn, support NOAA's crucial work as
they lead the weather and space weather forecasts
for the nation."
Once GOES-T is positioned in a
geostationary orbit 22,300 miles above Earth, it
will be renamed GOES-18. Following a successful
orbital checkout of its instruments and systems,
GOES-18 will go into service over the U.S.
West Coast and Pacific Ocean. This position puts it
in a key spot where it can observe weather sweeping
in from the west to the east over the U.S. – giving
forecasters an upstream view of what is coming.
"This launch continues a
48-year history of NOAA, NASA, industry, and
academia working together on geostationary satellite
observations," said John Gagosian, director of
NASA's Joint Agency Satellite Division. "GOES
satellites help us every day. They bring advanced
new capabilities to help forecasters better monitor
and predict dangerous environmental conditions like
hurricanes, thunderstorms, floods, and fires."
NASA's Goddard Space Flight
Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, oversees the
acquisition of the GOES-R spacecraft and instruments
and built the Magnetometer instrument for GOES-T, as
well as for the future GOES-U satellite. NASA's
Launch Services Program, based at the agency's
Kennedy Space Center in Florida, provided launch
management for the mission. NOAA oversees the GOES-R
Series Program through an integrated NOAA-NASA
office, managing the ground system, operating the
satellites, and distributing their data to users
worldwide. Lockheed Martin designs, builds, and
tests the GOES-R series satellites. L3Harris
Technologies provides the main instrument payload,
the Advanced Baseline Imager, along with the ground
system, which includes the antenna system for data
reception.
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