|
|
Chandra X-Ray Observatory Arrives at KSC for Processing
NASA News
National Aeronautics and
Space Administration
John F. Kennedy Space Center
Kennedy Space Center, Florida 32899
For Release: Feb. 4, 1999
KSC Release No.: 10-99
The Chandra X-ray Observatory, scheduled to launch aboard Space
Shuttle Columbia on mission STS-93, arrived at 2:45 p.m. EST today at
the Kennedy Space Center's Shuttle Landing Facility aboard an Air
Force C-5 Galaxy airplane. The telescope was shipped from the TRW
plant in Redondo Beach, CA, with departure from Los Angeles
International Airport occurring earlier this morning. A second
airplane also brought the necessary ground support equipment to KSC
for the campaign of final prelaunch integration and testing.
The ground support equipment is being off loaded today. The Chandra
Observatory is to be taken off the airplane early Friday morning and
transported to the Vertical Processing Facility located in the KSC
Industrial Area. There, the telescope will undergo final installation
of associated electronic components, be tested, fueled, and mated
with the Inertial Upper Stage (IUS) booster. A set of integrated
tests will follow.
A major milestone is the test using the Cargo Integrated Test
Equipment (CITE) to verify that Chandra and the Inertial Upper Stage
will have the ability to receive and reply to commands once aboard
the Space Shuttle. Also, an end-to-end test will verify the
communications systems of the payload and its ability to communicate
through the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite system with Mission
Control in Houston and the Chandra ground station located in
Cambridge, MA. The Chandra/IUS combination will then be ready to go
to the launch pad.
Once in the payload changeout room at Pad 39-B, the protective
cocoon will be removed from around the telescope and it will be
installed into Space Shuttle Columbia. An Integrated Verification
Test will be conducted to check all of the electrical connections and
the ability of the astronauts to send and receive commands from
Columbia's flight deck. The end-to-end test will be repeated at the
pad. Finally the IUS will go through a simulated countdown to verify
its readiness for launch.
Chandra will use the world's most powerful X-ray telescope to allow
scientists to monitor cosmic events that are invisible to
conventional optical telescopes. Chandra's X-ray images will yield
new insight into celestial phenomena such as the temperature and
extent of gas clouds that comprise clusters of galaxies and the
superheating of gas and dust particles as they swirl into black
holes. Chandra, previously known as the Advanced X-ray Astrophysics
Facility (AXAF), is the third in NASA's family of Great Observatories
that includes the Hubble Space Telescope and the Compton Gamma Ray
Observatory.
|