NASA Launches Third Generation Communications Satellite
Jan. 24, 2014
NASA's Tracking and Data Relay
Satellite L (TDRS-L), the 12th spacecraft in the agency's TDRS
Project, is safely in orbit after launching at
9:33 p.m. EST Thursday aboard
a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket from Cape Canaveral Air
Force Station in
Florida.
Ground controllers report the
satellite -- part of a network providing high-data-rate
communications to the International Space Station, Hubble Space
Telescope, launch vehicles and a host of other spacecraft -- is
in good health at the start of a three-month checkout by its
manufacturer, Boeing Space and Intelligence Systems of
El Segundo, Calif. NASA will conduct additional
tests before putting TDRS-L into service.
"TDRS-L and the entire TDRS fleet
provide a vital service to America's space program by supporting
missions that range from Earth-observation to deep space
discoveries," said NASA Administrator
Charles Bolden. "TDRS also
will support the first test of NASA's new deep space spacecraft,
the Orion crew module, in September. This test will see Orion
travel farther into space than any human spacecraft has gone in
more than 40 years."
The mission of the TDRS Project,
established in 1973, is to provide follow-on and replacement
spacecraft to support NASA's space communications network. This
network provides high data-rate communications. The TDRS-L
spacecraft is identical to the TDRS-K spacecraft launched in
2013.
"This launch ensures continuity of
services for the many missions that rely on the system every
day," said
Jeffrey Gramling, TDRS
project manager at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center,
Greenbelt, Md.
The TDRS fleet began operating during
the space shuttle era with the launch of TDRS-1 in 1983. Of the
11 TDRS spacecraft placed in service to date, eight still are
operational. Four of the eight have exceeded their design life.
Boeing Space and Intelligence Systems
completed the TDRS-L integration and testing at its satellite
factory in
El Segundo in November and launch processing began
after the spacecraft arrived in Florida
Dec. 6.
TDRS-M, the next spacecraft in this
series, is on track to be ready for launch in late 2015.
NASA's Space Communications and
Navigation Program, part of the Human Exploration and Operations
Mission Directorate (HEOMD) at the agency's Headquarters in
Washington, is responsible for the space network.
The TDRS Project Office at Goddard manages the TDRS development
program. Launch management of the launch service for TDRS-L is
the responsibility of HEOMD's Launch Services Program based at
the agency's
Kennedy Space Center in Florida. United
Launch Alliance provided the Atlas V rocket launch service.