home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 1980-01-09 | 91.5 KB | 2,327 lines |
- STS-34 PRESS KIT
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- GALILEO
- GALILEO MISSION EVENTS
- EARTH TO JUPITER
- VENUS
- FIRST EARTH PASS
- FIRST ASTEROID
- SECOND EARTH PASS
- SECOND ASTEROID
- APPROACHING JUPITER
- AT JUPITER
- The probe at Jupiter
- The orbiter at Jupiter
- SCIENTIFIC ACTIVITIES
- Spacecraft scientific activities
- Probe scientific activities
- Orbiter scientific activities
- GROUND SYSTEMS
- SPACECRAFT CHARACTERISTICS
- JUPITER'S SYSTEM
- WHY JUPITER INVESTIGATIONS ARE IMPORTANT
- GALILEO MANAGEMENT
- GALILEO ORBITER AND PROBE SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATIONS
- STS-34 INERTIAL UPPER STAGE (IUS-19)
- Specifications
- Airborne Support Equipment
- IUS Structure
- Equipment Support Section
- IUS Avionics Subsystems
- IUS Solid Rocket Motors
- Reaction Control System
- IUS to Spacecraft Interfaces
- Flight Sequence
- SHUTTLE SOLAR BACKSCATTER ULTRAVIOLET INSTRUMENT (SSBUV)
- GROWTH HORMONE CONCENTRATIONS AND DISTRIBUTION IN PLANTS
- POLYMER MORPHOLOGY
-
-
-
-
- GENERAL RELEASE
-
- RELEASE: 89-151
-
- SHUTTLE ATLANTIS TO DEPLOY GALILEO PROBE TOWARD JUPITER
-
-
- Space Shuttle mission STS-34 will deploy the Galileo planetary
- exploration spacecraft into low-Earth orbit starting Galileo on its journey
- to explore Jupiter. Galileo will be the second planetary probe deployed
- from the Shuttle this year following Atlantis' successful launch of
- Magellan toward Venus exploration in May.
-
- Following deployment about 6 hours after launch, Galileo will be
- propelled on a trajectory, known as Venus-Earth-Earth Gravity Assist
- (VEEGA) by an Air Force-developed, inertial upper stage (IUS). Galileo's
- trajectory will swing around Venus, the sun and Earth before Galileo
- makes it's way toward Jupiter.
-
- Flying the VEEGA track, Galileo will arrive at Venus in February 1990.
- During the flyby, Galileo will make measurements to determine the
- presence of lightning on Venus and take time-lapse photography of Venus'
- cloud circulation patterns. Accelerated by Venus' gravity, the spacecraft
- will head back to Earth.
-
- Enroute, Galileo will activate onboard remote-sensing equipment to
- gather near-infrared data on the composition and characteristics of the
- far side of Earth's moon. Galileo also will map the hydrogen distribution
- of the Earth's atmosphere.
-
- Acquiring additional energy from the Earth's gravitational forces,
- Galileo will travel on a 2-year journey around the sun spending 10 months
- inside an asteroid belt. On Oct. 29, 1991, Galileo wlll pass within 600
- miles of the asteroid Gaspra.
-
- On the second Earth flyby in December 1992, Galileo will photograph
- the north pole of the moon in an effort to determine if ice exists.
- Outbound, Galileo will activate the time-lapse photography system to
- produce a "movie" of the moon orbiting Earth.
-
- Racing toward Jupiter, Galileo will make a second trek through the
-
-
-
-
-
-
- asteroid belt passing within 600 miles of asteroid Ida on Aug. 29, 1993.
- Science data gathered from both asteroid encounters will focus on surface
- geology and composition.
-
- Five months prior to the Dec. 7, 1995, arrival at Jupiter, Galileo's
- atmospheric probe, encased in an oval heat shield, will spin away from the
- orbiter at a rate of 5 revolutions per minute (rpm) and follow a ballistic
- trajectory aimed at a spot 6 degrees north of Jupiter's equator. The probe
- will enter Jupiter's atmosphere at a shallow angle to avoid burning up like
- a meteor or ricocheting off the atmosphere back into space.
-
- At approximately Mach 1 speed, the probe's pilot parachute will deploy,
- removing the deceleration module aft cover. Deployment of the main
- parachute will follow, pulling the descent module out of the aeroshell to
- expose the instrument-sensing elements. During the 75-minute descent
- into the Jovian atmosphere, the probe will use the orbiter to transmit
- data back to Earth. After 75 minutes, the probe will be crushed under the
- heavy atmospheric pressure.
-
- The Galileo orbiter will continue its primary mission, orbiting around
- Jupiter and four of its satellites, returning science data for the next 22
- months.
-
- Galileo's scientific goals include the study of the chemical
- composition, state and dynamics of the Jovian atmosphere and satellites,
- and the investigation of the structure and physical dynamics of the
- powerful Jovian magnetosphere.
-
- Overall responsibility for management of the project, including orbiter
- development, resides at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena,
- Calif. The NASA Ames Research Center, Mountain View, Calif., manages
- the probe system. JPL built the 2,500-lb. spacecraft and Hughes Aircraft
- Co. built the 740-lb. probe.
-
- Modifications made to Galileo since flight postponement in 1986
- include the addition of sunshields to the base and top of the antenna, new
- thermal control surfaces, blankets and heaters. Because of the extended
- length of the mission, the electrical circuitry of the thermoelectric
- generator has been revised to reduce power demand throughout the
- mission to assure adequate power supply for mission completion.
-
- Joining Galileo in the payload bay of Atlantis will be the Shuttle Solar
- Backscatter Ultraviolet (SSBUV) instrument. The SSBUV is designed to
- provide calibration of backscatter ultraviolet instruments currently being
- flown on free-flying satellites. SSBUV's primary objective is to check the
- calibration of the ozone sounders on satellites to verify the accuracy of
- the data set of atmospheric ozone and solar irradiance data.
-
- The SSBUV is contained in two Get Away Special canisters in the
- payload bay and weighs about 1219 lbs . One canister contains the SSBUV
- spectrometer and five supporting optical sensors. The second canister
- houses data, command and power systems. An interconnecting cable
- provides the communication link between the two canisters.
-
-
-
- The Galileo probe arrived at the Spacecraft Assembly and
- Encapsulation Facility (SAEF) 2 on April 17 and the spacecraft arrived on
- May 16. While at SAEF-2, the spacecraft and probe were joined and tested
- together to verify critical connections. Galileo was delivered to the
- Vertical Processing Facility (VPF) on Aug. 1. The Inertial Upper Stage
- (IUS) was delivered to the VPF on July 30. The Galileo/IUS were joined
- together on Aug. 3 and all integrated testing was performed during the
- second week of August.
-
-
-
- GALILEO
-
- Galileo is a NASA spacecraft mission to Jupiter to study the planet's
- atmosphere, satellites and surrounding magnetosphere. It was named for
- the Italian renaissance scientist who discovered Jupiter's major moons by
- using the first astronomical telescope.
-
- This mission will be the first to make direct measurements from an
- instrumented probe within Jupiter's atmosphere and the first to conduct
- long-term observations of the planet and its magnetosphere and satellites
- from orbit around Jupiter. It will be the first orbiter and atmospheric
- probe for any of the outer planets. On the way to Jupiter, Galileo also will
- observe Venus, the Earth-moon system, one or two asteroids and various
- phenomena in interplanetary space.
-
- Galileo will be boosted into low-Earth orbit by the Shuttle Atlantis and
- then boosted out of Earth orbit by a solid rocket Inertial Upper Stage. The
- spacecraft will fly past Venus and twice by the Earth, using gravity
- assists from the planets to pick up enough speed to reach Jupiter. Travel
- time from launch to Jupiter is a little more than 6 years.
-
- In December 1995, the Galileo atmospheric probe will conduct a brief,
- direct examination of Jupiter's atmosphere, while the larger part of the
- craft, the orbiter, begins a 22-month, 10-orbit tour of major satellites
- and the magnetosphere, including long-term observations of Jupiter
- throughout this phase.
-
- The 2-ton Galileo orbiter spacecraft carries 9 scientific instruments.
- There are another six experiments on the 750-pound probe. The spacecraft
- radio link to Earth serves as an additional instrument for scientific
- measurements. The probe's scientific data will be relayed to Earth by the
- orbiter during the 75-minute period while the probe is descending into
- Jupiter's atmosphere. Galileo will communicate with its controllers and
- scientists through NASAUs Deep Space Network, using tracking stations in
- California, Spain and Australia.
-
-
-
- GALILEO MISSION EVENTS
-
- Launch Window (Atlantis and IUS).....................Oct. 12 to Nov. 21, 1989
- (Note: for both asteroids, closes in mid-October)
- Venus flyby ( 9,300 mi).............................*Feb. 9, 1990
- Venus data playback..................................Oct. 1990
- Earth 1 flyby ( about 600 mi).......................*Dec. 8, 1990
- Asteroid Gaspra flyby (600 mi)......................*Oct. 29, 1991
- Earth 2 flyby (200 mi)..............................*Dec. 8, 1992
- Asteroid Ida flyby (600 mi).........................*Aug. 28, 1993
- Probe release........................................July 1995
- Jupiter arrival......................................Dec. 7, 1995
- (includes Io flyby, probe entry and relay, Jupiter orbit insertion)
- Orbital tour of Galilean satellites Dec '95-Oct '97
-
- *Exact dates may vary according to actual launch date
-
-
-
-
- EARTH TO JUPITER
-
-
-
- Galileo will make three planetary encounters in the course of its
- gravity-assisted flight to Jupiter. These provide opportunities for
- scientific observation and measurement of Venus and the Earth-moon
- system. The mission also has a chance to fly close to one or two
- asteroids, bodies which have never been observed close up, and obtain data
- on other phenomena of interplanetary space.
-
- Scientists are currently studying how to use the Galileo scientific
- instruments and the limited ability to collect, store and transmit data
-
-
-
-
-
-
- during the early phase of flight to make the best use of these
- opportunities. Instruments designed to observe Jupiter's atmosphere from
- afar can improve our knowledge of the atmosphere of Venus and sensors
- designed for the study of Jupiter's moons can add to our information about
- our own moon.
-
-
-
-
- VENUS
-
- The Galileo spacecraft will approach Venus early in 1990 from the
- night side and pass across the sunlit hemisphere, allowing observation of
- the clouds and atmosphere. Both infrared and ultraviolet spectral
- observations are planned, as well as several camera images and other
- remote measurements. The search for deep cloud patterns and for
- lightning storms will be limited by the fact that all the Venus data must
- be tape-recorded on the spacecraft for playback 8 months later.
-
- The spacecraft was originally designed to operate between Earth and
- Jupiter, where sunlight is 25 times weaker than at Earth and
- temperatures are much lower. The VEEGA mission will expose the
- spacecraft to a hotter environment from Earth to Venus and back.
- Spacecraft engineers devised a set of sunshades to protect the craft. For
- this system to work, the front end of the spacecraft must be aimed
- precisely at the Sun, with the main antenna furled for protection from the
- Sun's rays until after the first Earth flyby in December 1990. This
- precludes the use of the Galileo high-gain antenna and therefore,
- scientists must wait until the spacecraft is close to Earth to receive the
- recorded Venus data, transmitted through a low-gain antenna.
-
-
-
- FIRST EARTH PASS
-
- Approaching Earth for the first time about 14 months after launch, the
- Galileo spacecraft will observe, from a distance, the nightside of Earth
- and parts of both the sunlit and unlit sides of the moon. After passing
- Earth, Galileo will observe Earth's sunlit side. At this short range,
- scientific data are transmitted at the high rate using only the
- spacecraft's low-gain antennas. The high-gain antenna is to be unfurled
- like an umbrella, and its high-power transmitter turned on and checked
- out, about 5 months after the first Earth encounter.
-
-
-
- FIRST ASTEROID
-
- Nine months after the Earth passage and still in an elliptical solar
- orbit, Galileo will enter the asteroid belt, and two months later, will have
- its first asteroid encounter. Gaspra is believed to be a fairly
- representative main-belt asteroid, about 10 miles across and probably
- similar in composition to stony meteorites.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- The spacecraft will pass within about 600 miles at a relative speed of
- about 18,000 miles per hour. It will collect several pictures of Gaspra
- and make spectral measurements to indicate its composition and physical
- properties.
-
-
-
-
- SECOND EARTH PASS
-
- Thirteen months after the Gaspra encounter, the spacecraft will have
- completed its 2-year elliptical orbit around the Sun and will arrive back
- at Earth. It will need a much larger ellipse (with a 6-year period) to reach
- as far as Jupiter. The second flyby of Earth will pump the orbit up to that
- size, acting as a natural apogee kick motor for the Galileo spacecraft.
-
- Passing about 185 miles above the surface, near the altitude at which
- it had been deployed from the Space Shuttle almost three years earlier,
- Galileo will use Earth's gravitation to change the spacecraft's flight
- direction and pick up about 8,000 miles per hour in speed.
-
- Each gravity-assist flyby requires about three rocket-thrusting
- sessions, using Galileo's onboard retropropulsion module, to fine-tune the
- flight path. The asteroid encounters require similar maneuvers to obtain
- the best observing conditions.
-
- Passing the Earth for the last time, the spacecraft's scientific
- equipment will make thorough observations of the planet, both for
- comparison with Venus and Jupiter and to aid in Earth studies. If all goes
- well, there is a good chance that Galileo will enable scientists to record
- the motion of the moon about the Earth while the Earth itself rotates.
-
-
-
-
- SECOND ASTEROID
-
- Nine months after the final Earth flyby, Galileo may have a second
- asteroid-observing opportunity. Ida is about 20 miles across. Like
- Gaspra, Ida is believed to represent the majority of main-belt asteroids in
- composition, though there are believed to be differences between the two.
- Relative velocity for this flyby will be nearly 28,000 miles per hour, with
- a planned closest approach of about 600 miles.
-
-
-
- APPROACHING JUPITER
-
- Some 2 years after leaving Earth for the third time and 5 months
- before reaching Jupiter, Galileo's probe must separate from the orbiter.
- The spacecraft turns to aim the probe precisely for its entry point in the
- Jupiter atmosphere, spins up to 10 revolutions per minute and releases
- the spin-stabilized probe. Then the Galileo orbiter maneuvers again to
- aim for its own Jupiter encounter and resumes its scientific
- measurements of the interplanetary environment underway since the
- launch more than 5 years before.
-
- While the probe is still approaching Jupiter, the orbiter will have its
- first two satellite encounters. After passing within 20,000 miles of
- Europa, it will fly about 600 miles above Io's volcano-torn surface,
- twenty times closer than the closest flyby altitude of Voyager in 1979.
-
-
-
-
- AT JUPITER
-
-
- The Probe at Jupiter
-
- The probe mission has four phases: launch, cruise, coast and
- entry-descent. During launch and cruise, the probe will be carried by the
- orbiter and serviced by a common umbilical. The probe will be dormant
- during cruise except for annual checkouts of spacecraft systems and
- instruments. During this period, the orbiter will provide the probe with
- electric power, commands, data transmission and some thermal control.
-
- Six hours before entering the atmosphere, the probe will be shooting
- through space at about 40,000 mph. At this time, its command unit
- signals "wake up" and instruments begin collecting data on lightning, radio
- emissions and energetic particles.
-
- A few hours later, the probe will slam into Jupiter's atmosphere at
- 115,000 mph, fast enough to jet from Los Angeles to New York in 90
- seconds. Deceleration to about Mach 1 -- the speed of sound -- should
- take just a few minutes. At maximum deceleration as the craft slows
- from 115,000 mph to 100 mph, it will be hurtling against a force 350
- times Earth's gravity. The incandescent shock wave ahead of the probe
- will be as bright as the sun and reach searing temperatures of up to
- 28,000 degrees Fahrenheit. After the aerodynamic braking has slowed the
- probe, it will drop its heat shields and deploy its parachute. This will
- allow the probe to float down about 125 miles through the clouds, passing
- from a pressure of 1/10th that on Earth's surface to about 25 Earth
- atmospheres.
-
- About 4 minutes after probe entry into JupiterUs atmosphere, a pilot
- chute deploys and explosive nuts shoot off the top section of the probe's
- protective shell. As the cover whips away, it pulls out and opens the main
- parachute attached to the inner capsule. What remains of the probe's
- outer shell, with its massive heat shield, falls away as the parachute
- slows the instrument module.
-
- From there on, suspended from the main parachute, the probe's capsule
- with its activated instruments floats downward toward the bright clouds
- below.
-
- The probe will pass through the white cirrus clouds of ammonia
- crystals - the highest cloud deck. Beneath this ammonia layer probably lie
- reddish-brown clouds of ammonium hydrosulfides. Once past this layer,
- the probe is expected to reach thick water clouds. This lowest cloud layer
- may act as a buffer between the uniformly mixed regions below and the
- turbulent swirl of gases above.
-
- Jupiter's atmosphere is primarily hydrogen and helium. For most of its
- descent through Jupiter's three main cloud layers, the probe will be
- immersed in gases at or below room temperature. However, it may
- encounter hurricane winds up to 200 mph and lightning and heavy rain at
- the base of the water clouds believed to exist on the planet. Eventually,
- the probe will sink below these clouds, where rising pressure and
- temperature will destroy it. The probe's active life in Jupiter's
- atmosphere is expected to be about 75 minutes in length. The probe
- batteries are not expected to last beyond this point, and the relaying
- orbiter will move out of reach.
-
- To understand this huge gas planet, scientists must find out about its
- chemical components and the dynamics of its atmosphere. So far,
- scientific data are limited to a two-dimensional view (pictures of the
- planet's cloud tops) of a three-dimensional process (Jupiter's weather).
- But to explore such phenomena as the planet's incredible coloring, the
- Great Red Spot and the swirling shapes and high-speed motion of its
- topmost clouds, scientists must penetrate Jupiter's visible surface and
- investigate the atmosphere concealed in the deep-lying layers below.
-
- A set of six scientific instruments on the probe will measure, among
- other things, the radiation field near Jupiter, the temperature, pressure,
- density and composition of the planet's atmosphere from its first faint
- outer traces to the hot, murky hydrogen atmosphere 100 miles below the
- cloud tops. All of the information will be gathered during the probe's
- descent on an 8-foot parachute. Probe data will be sent to the Galileo
- Orbiter 133,000 miles overhead then relayed across the half billion miles
- to Deep Space Network stations on Earth.
-
- To return its science, the probe relay radio aboard the orbiter must
- automatically acquire the probe signal below within 50 seconds, with a
- success probability of 99.5 percent. It must reacquire the signal
- immediately should it become lost.
-
- To survive the heat and pressure of entry, the probe spacecraft is
- composed of two separate units: an inner capsule containing the
- scientific instruments, encased in a virtually impenetrable outer shell.
- The probe weighs 750 pounds. The outer shell is almost all heat shield
- material.
-
-
- The Orbiter at Jupiter
-
- After releasing the probe, the orbiter will use its main engine to go
- into orbit around Jupiter. This orbit, the first of 10 planned, will have a
- period of about 8 months. A close flyby of Ganymede in July 1996 will
- shorten the orbit, and each time the Galileo orbiter returns to the inner
- zone of satellites, it will make a gravity-assist close pass over one or
- another of the satellites, changing Galileo's orbit while making close
- observations. These satellite encounters will be at altitudes as close as
- 125 miles above their surfaces. Throughout the 22-month orbital phase,
- Galileo will continue observing the planet and the satellites and continue
- gathering data on the magnetospheric environment.
-
-
-
- SCIENTIFIC ACTIVITIES
-
- Galileo's scientific experiments will be carried out by more than 100
- scientists from six nations. Except for the radio science investigation,
- these are supported by dedicated instruments on the Galileo orbiter and
- probe. NASA has appointed 15 interdisciplinary scientists whose studies
- include data from more than one Galileo instrument.
-
- The instruments aboard the probe will measure the temperatures and
- pressure of Jupiter's atmosphere at varying altitudes and determine its
- chemical composition including major and minor constituents (such as
- hydrogen, helium, ammonia, methane, and water) and the ratio of hydrogen
- to helium. Jupiter is thought to have a bulk composition similar to that of
- the primitive solar nebula from which it was formed. Precise
- determination of the ratio of hydrogen to helium would provide an
- important factual check of the Big Bang theory of the genesis of the
- universe.
-
- Other probe experiments will determine the location and structure of
- Jupiter's clouds, the existence and nature of its lightning, and the amount
- of heat radiating from the planet compared to the heat absorbed from
- sunlight.
-
- In addition, measurements will be made of Jupiter's numerous radio
- emissions and of the high-energy particles trapped in the planet's
- innermost magnetic field. These measurements for Galileo will be made
- within a distance of 26,000 miles from Jupiter's cloud tops, far closer
- than the previous closest approach to Jupiter by Pioneer 11. The probe
- also will determine vertical wind shears using Doppler radio
- measurements made of probe motions from the radio receiver aboard the
- orbiter.
-
- Jupiter appears to radiate about twice as much energy as it receives
- from the sun and the resulting convection currents from Jupiter's internal
- heat source towards its cooler polar regions could explain some of the
- planet's unusual weather patterns.
-
- Jupiter is over 11 times the diameter of Earth and spins about two and
- one-half times faster -- a jovian day is only 10 hours long. A point on the
- equator of Jupiter's visible surface races along at 28,000 mph. This rapid
- spin may account for many of the bizarre circulation patterns observed on
- the planet.
-
-
- Spacecraft Scientific Activities
-
- The Galileo mission and systems were designed to investigate three
- broad aspects of the Jupiter system: the planet's atmosphere, the
- satellites and the magnetosphere. The spacecraft is in three segments to
- focus on these areas: the atmospheric probe; a non-spinning section of the
- orbiter carrying cameras and other remote sensors; and the spinning main
- section of the orbiter spacecraft which includes the propulsion module,
- the communications antennas, main computers and most support systems
- as well as the fields and particles instruments, which sense and measure
- the environment directly as the spacecraft flies through it.
-
-
- Probe Scientific Activities
-
- The probe will enter the atmosphere about 6 degrees north of the
- equator. The probe weighs just under 750 pounds and includes a
- deceleration module to slow and protect the descent module, which
- carries out the scientific mission.
-
- The deceleration module consists of an aeroshell and an aft cover
- designed to block the heat generated by slowing from the probe's arrival
- speed of about 115,000 miles per hour to subsonic speed in less than 2
- minutes. After the covers are released, the descent module deploys its
- 8-foot parachute and its instruments, the control and data system, and
- the radio-relay transmitter go to work.
-
- Operating at 128 bits per second, the dual L-band transmitters send
- nearly identical streams of scientific data to the orbiter. The probe's
- relay radio aboard the orbiter will have two redundant receivers that
- process probe science data, plus radio science and engineering data for
- transmission to the orbiter communications system. Minimum received
- signal strength is 31 dBm. The receivers also measure signal strength and
- Doppler shift as part of the experiments for measuring wind speeds and
- atmospheric absorption of radio signals.
-
- Probe electronics are powered by long-life, high-discharge-rate
- 34-volt lithium batteries, which remain dormant for more than 5 years
- during the journey to Jupiter. The batteries have an estimated capacity of
- about 18 amp-hours on arrival at Jupiter.
-
-
- Orbiter Scientific Activities
-
- The orbiter, in addition to delivering the probe to Jupiter and relaying
- probe data to Earth, will support all the scientific investigations of
- Venus, the Earth and moon, asteroids and the interplanetary medium,
- Jupiter's satellites and magnetosphere, and observation of the giant
- planet itself.
-
- The orbiter weighs about 5,200 pounds including about 2,400 pounds of
- rocket propellant to be expended in some 30 relatively small maneuvers
- during the long gravity-assisted flight to Jupiter, the large thrust
- maneuver which puts the craft into its Jupiter orbit, and the 30 or so trim
- maneuvers planned for the satellite tour phase.
-
- The retropropulsion module consists of 12 10-newton thrusters, a
- single 400-newton engine, and the fuel, oxidizer, and pressurizing-gas
- tanks, tubing, valves and control equipment. (A thrust of 10 newtons
- would support a weight of about 2.2 pounds at Earth's surface). The
- propulsion system was developed and built by
- Messerschmitt-Bolkow-Blohm and provided by the Federal Republic of
- Germany.
-
- The orbiter's maximum communications rate is 134 kilobits per second
- (the equivalent of about one black-and-white image per minute); there are
- other data rates, down to 10 bits per second, for transmitting engineering
- data under poor conditions. The spacecraft transmitters operate at
- S-band and X-band (2295 and 8415 megahertz) frequencies between Earth
- and on L-band between the probe.
-
- The high-gain antenna is a 16-foot umbrella-like reflector unfurled
- after the first Earth flyby. Two low-gain antennas (one pointed forward
- and one aft, both mounted on the spinning section) are provided to support
- communications during the Earth-Venus-Earth leg of the flight and
- whenever the main antenna is not deployed and pointed at Earth. The
- despun section of the orbiter carries a radio relay antenna for receiving
- the probe's data transmissions.
-
- Electrical power is provided to Galileo's equipment by two radioisotope
- thermoelectric generators. Heat produced by natural radioactive decay of
- plutonium 238 dioxide is converted to approximately 500 watts of
- electricity (570 watts at launch, 480 at the end of the mission) to operate
- the orbiter equipment for its 8-year active period. This is the same type
- of power source used by the Voyager and Pioneer Jupiter spacecraft in
- their long outer-planet missions, by the Viking lander spacecraft on Mars
- and the lunar scientific packages left on the Moon.
-
- Most spacecraft are stabilized in flight either by spinning around a
- major axis or by maintaining a fixed orientation in space, referenced to
- the sun and another star. Galileo represents a hybrid of these techniques,
- with a spinning section rotating ordinarily at 3 rpm and a "despun" section
- which is counter-rotated to provide a fixed orientation for cameras and
- other remote sensors.
-
- Instruments that measure fields and particles, together with the main
- antenna, the power supply, the propulsion module, most of the computers
- and control electronics, are mounted on the spinning section. The
- instruments include magnetometer sensors mounted on a 36-foot boom to
- escape interference from the spacecraft; a plasma instrument detecting
- low-energy charged particles and a plasma-wave detector to study waves
- generated in planetary magnetospheres and by lightning discharges; a
- high-energy particle detector; and a detector of cosmic and Jovian dust.
-
- The despun section carries instruments and other equipment whose
- operation depends on a fixed orientation in space. The instruments include
- the camera system; the near-infrared mapping spectrometer to make
- multispectral images for atmosphere and surface chemical analysis; the
- ultraviolet spectrometer to study gases and ionized gases; and the
- photopolarimeter radiometer to measure radiant and reflected energy. The
- camera system is expected to obtain images of Jupiter's satellites at
- resolutions from 20 to 1,000 times better than Voyager's best.
-
- This section also carries a dish antenna to track the probe in Jupiter's
- atmosphere and pick up its signals for relay to Earth. The probe is carried
- on the despun section, and before it is released, the whole spacecraft is
- spun up briefly to 10 rpm in order to spin-stabilize the probe.
-
- The Galileo spacecraft will carry out its complex operations, including
- maneuvers, scientific observations and communications, in response to
- stored sequences which are interpreted and executed by various on-board
- computers. These sequences are sent up to the orbiter periodically
- through the Deep Space Network in the form of command loads.
-
-
- GROUND SYSTEMS
-
- Galileo communicates with Earth via NASA's Deep Space Network
- (DSN), which has a complex of large antennas with receivers and
- transmitters located in the California desert, another in Australia and a
- third in Spain, linked to a network control center at NASAUs Jet Propulsion
- Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif. The spacecraft receives commands, sends
- science and engineering data, and is tracked by Doppler and ranging
- measurements through this network.
-
- At JPL, about 275 scientists, engineers and technicians, will be
- supporting the mission at launch, increasing to nearly 400 for Jupiter
- operations including support from the German retropropulsion team at
- their control center in the FGR. Their responsibilities include spacecraft
- command, interpreting engineering and scientific data from Galileo to
- understand its performance, and analyzing navigation data from the DSN.
- The controllers use a set of complex computer programs to help them
- control the spacecraft and interpret the data.
-
- Because the time delay in radio signals from Earth to Jupiter and back
- is more than an hour, the Galileo spacecraft was designed to operate from
- programs sent to it in advance and stored in spacecraft memory. A single
- master sequence program can cover 4 weeks of quiet operations between
- planetary and satellite encounters. During busy Jupiter operations, one
- program covers only a few days. Actual spacecraft tasks are carried out
- by several subsystems and scientific instruments, many of which work
- from their own computers controlled by the main sequence.
-
- Designing these sequences is a complex process balancing the desire to
- make certain scientific observations with the need to safeguard the
- spacecraft and mission. The sequence design process itself is supported
- by software programs, for example, which display to the scientist maps of
- the instrument coverage on the surface of an approaching satellite for a
- given spacecraft orientation and trajectory. Notwithstanding these aids,
- a typical 3-day satellite encounter may take efforts spread over many
- months to design, check and recheck. The controllers also use software
- designed to check the command sequence further against flight rules and
- constraints.
-
- The spacecraft regularly reports its status and health through an
- extensive set of engineering measurements. Interpreting these data into
- trends and averting or working around equipment failures is a major task
- for the mission operations team. Conclusions from this activity become
- an important input, along with scientific plans, to the sequence design
- process. This too is supported by computer programs written and used in
- the mission support area.
-
- Navigation is the process of estimating, from radio range and Doppler
- measurements, the position and velocity of the spacecraft to predict its
- flight path and design course-correcting maneuvers. These calculations
- must be done with computer support. The Galileo mission, with its
- complex gravity-assist flight to Jupiter and 10 gravity-assist satellite
- encounters in the Jovian system, is extremely dependent on consistently
- accurate navigation.
-
- In addition to the programs that directly operate the spacecraft and
- are periodically transmitted to it, the mission operations team uses
- software amounting to 650,000 lines of programming code in the sequence
- design process; 1,615,000 lines in the telemetry interpretation; and
- 550,000 lines of code in navigation. These must all be written, checked,
- tested, used in mission simulations and, in many cases, revised before the
- mission can begin.
-
- Science investigators are located at JPL or other university laboratories
- and linked by computers. From any of these locations, the scientists can
- be involved in developing the sequences affecting their experiments and,
- in some cases, in helping to change preplanned sequences to follow up on
- unexpected discoveries with second looks and confirming observations.
-
-
-
-
- JUPITER'S SYSTEM
-
- Jupiter is the largest and fastest-spinning planet in the solar system.
- Its radius is more than 11 times Earth's, and its mass is 318 times that of
- our planet. Named for the chief of the Roman gods, Jupiter contains more
- mass than all the other planets combined. It is made mostly of light
- elements, principally hydrogen and helium. Its atmosphere and clouds are
- deep and dense, and a significant amount of energy is emitted from its
- interior.
-
- The earliest Earth-based telescopic observations showed bands and
- spots in Jupiter's atmosphere. One storm system, the Red Spot, has been
- seen to persist over three centuries.
-
- Atmospheric forms and dynamics were observed in increasing detail
- with the Pioneer and Voyager flyby spacecraft, and Earth-based infrared
- astronomers have recently studied the nature and vertical dynamics of
- deeper clouds.
-
- Sixteen satellites are known. The four largest, discovered by the
- Italian scientist Galileo Galilei in 1610, are the size of small planets.
- The innermost of these, Io, has active sulfurous volcanoes, discovered by
- Voyager 1 and further observed by Voyager 2 and Earth-based infrared
- astronomy. Io and Europa are about the size and density of Earth's moon (3
- to 4 times the density of water) and probably rocky inside. Ganymede and
- Callisto, further out from Jupiter, are the size of Mercury but less than
- twice as dense as water. Their cratered surfaces look icy in Voyager
- images, and they may be composed partly of ice or water.
-
- Of the other satellites, eight (probably captured asteroids) orbit
- irregularly far from the planet, and four (three discovered by the Voyager
- mission in 1979) are close to the planet. Voyager also discovered a thin
- ring system at Jupiter in 1979.
-
- Jupiter has the strongest planetary magnetic field known. The
- resulting magnetosphere is a huge teardrop-shaped, plasma-filled cavity
- in the solar wind pointing away from the sun. JupiterUs magnetosphere is
- the largest single entity in our solar system, measuring more than 14
- times the diameter of the sun. The inner part of the magnetic field is
- doughnut- shaped, but farther out it flattens into a disk. The magnetic
- poles are offset and tilted relative to Jupiter's axis of rotation, so the
- field appears to wobble with Jupiter's rotation (just under 10 hours),
- sweeping up and down across the inner satellites and making waves
- throughout the magnetosphere.
-
-
-
-
- WHY JUPITER INVESTIGATIONS ARE IMPORTANT
-
- With a thin skin of turbulent winds and brilliant, swift-moving clouds,
- the huge sphere of Jupiter is a vast sea of liquid hydrogen and helium.
- Jupiter's composition (about 88 percent hydrogen and 11 percent helium
- with small amounts of methane, ammonia and water) is thought to
- resemble the makeup of the solar nebula, the cloud of gas and dust from
- which the sun and planets formed. Scientists believe Jupiter holds
- important clues to conditions in the early solar system and the process of
- planet formation.
-
- Jupiter may also provide insights into the formation of the universe
- itself. Since it resembles the interstellar gas and dust that are thought
- to have been created in the "Big Bang," studies of Jupiter may help
- scientists calibrate models of the beginning of the universe.
-
- Though starlike in composition, Jupiter is too small to generate
- temperatures high enough to ignite nuclear fusion, the process that
- powers the stars. Some scientists believe that the sun and Jupiter began
- as unequal partners in a binary star system. (If a double star system had
- developed, it is unlikely life could have arisen in the solar system.) While
- in a sense a "failed star," Jupiter is almost as large as a planet can be. If
- it contained more mass, it would not have grown larger, but would have
- shrunk from compression by its own gravity. If it were 100 times more
- massive, thermonuclear reactions would ignite, and Jupiter would be a
- star.
-
- For a brief period after its formation, Jupiter was much hotter, more
- luminous, and about 10 times larger than it is now, scientists believe.
- Soon after accretion (the condensation of a gas and dust cloud into a
- planet), its brightness dropped from about one percent of the Sun's to
- about one billionth -- a decline of ten million times.
-
- In its present state Jupiter emits about twice as much heat as it
- receives from the Sun. The loss of this heat -- residual energy left over
- from the compressive heat of accretion -- means that Jupiter is cooling
- and losing energy at a tremendously rapid rate. Temperatures in Jupiter's
- core, which were about 90,000 degrees Fahrenheit in the planet's hot,
- early phase, are now about 54,000 degrees Fahrenheit, 100 times hotter
- than any terrestrial surface, but 500 times cooler than the temperature at
- the center of the sun. Temperatures on Jupiter now range from 54,000
- degrees Fahrenheit at the core to minus 248 degrees Fahrenheit at the top
- of the cloud banks.
-
- Mainly uniform in composition, Jupiter's structure is determined by
- gradations in temperature and pressure. Deep in Jupiter's interior there is
- thought to be a small rocky core, comprising about four percent of the
- planet's mass. This "small" core (about the size of 10 Earths) is
- surrounded by a 25,000-mile-thick layer of liquid metallic hydrogen.
- (Metallic hydrogen is liquid, but sufficiently compressed to behave as
- metal.) Motions of this liquid "metal" are the source of the planet's
- enormous magnetic field. This field is created by the same dynamo effect
- found in the metallic cores of Earth and other planets.
-
- At the outer limit of the metallic hydrogen layer, pressures equal three
- million times that of Earth's atmosphere and the temperature has cooled
- to 19,000 degrees Fahrenheit.
-
- Surrounding the central metallic hydrogen region is an outer shell of
- "liquid" molecular hydrogen. Huge pressures compress Jupiter's gaseous
- hydrogen until, at this level, it behaves like a liquid. The liquid hydrogen
- layer extends upward for about 15,000 miles. Then it gradually becomes
- gaseous. This transition region between liquid and gas marks, in a sense,
- where the solid and liquid planet ends and its atmosphere begins.
-
- From here, Jupiter's atmosphere extends up for 600 more miles, but
- only in the top 50 miles are found the brilliant bands of clouds for which
- Jupiter is known. The tops of these bands are colored bright yellow, red
- and orange from traces of phosphorous and sulfur. Five or six of these
- bands, counterflowing east and west, encircle the planet in each
- hemisphere. At one point near Jupiter's equator, east winds of 220 mph
- blow right next to west winds of 110 mph. At boundaries of these bands,
- rapid changes in wind speed and direction create large areas of turbulence
- and shear. These are the same forces that create tornados here on Earth.
- On Jupiter, these "baroclinic instabilities" are major phenomena, creating
- chaotic, swirling winds and spiral features such as White Ovals.
-
- The brightest cloud banks, known as zones, are believed to be higher,
- cooler areas where gases are ascending. The darker bands, called belts,
-
-
-
-
-
-
- are thought to be warmer, cloudier regions of descent.
-
- The top cloud layer consists of white cirrus clouds of ammonia
- crystals, at a pressure six-tenths that of Earth's atmosphere at sea level
- (.6 bar). Beneath this layer, at a pressure of about two Earth atmospheres
- (2 bars) and a temperature of near minus 160 degrees Fahrenheit, a
- reddish-brown cloud of ammonium hydrosulfide is predicted.
-
- At a pressure of about 6 bars, there are believed to be clouds of water
- and ice. However, recent Earth-based spectroscopic studies suggest that
- there may be less water on Jupiter than expected. While scientists
- previously believed Jupiter and the sun would have similar proportions of
- water, recent work indicates there may be 100 times less water on
- Jupiter than if it had a solar mixture of elements. If this is the case,
- there may be only a thin layer of water-ice at the 6 bar level.
-
- However, Jupiter's cloud structure, except for the highest layer of
- ammonia crystals, remains uncertain. The height of the lower clouds is
- still theoretical -- clouds are predicted to lie at the temperature levels
- where their assumed constituents are expected to condense. The Galileo
- probe will make the first direct observations of Jupiter's lower
- atmosphere and clouds, providing crucial information.
-
- The forces driving Jupiter's fast-moving winds are not well understood
- yet. The classical explanation holds that strong currents are created by
- convection of heat from Jupiter's hot interior to the cooler polar regions,
- much as winds and ocean currents are driven on Earth, from equator to
- poles. But temperature differences do not fully explain wind velocities
- that can reach 265 mph. An alternative theory is that pressure
- differences, due to changes in the thermodynamic state of hydrogen at
- high and low temperatures, set up the wind jets.
-
- Jupiter's rapid rotation rate is thought to have effects on wind
- velocity and to produce some of Jupiter's bizarre circulation patterns,
- including many spiral features. These rotational effects are known as
- manifestations of the Coriolis force. Coriolis force is what determines
- the spin direction of weather systems. It basically means that on the
- surface of a sphere (a planet), a parcel of gas farther from the poles has a
- higher rotational velocity around the planet than a parcel closer to the
- poles. As gases then move north or south, interacting parcels with
- different velocities produce vortices (whirlpools). This may account for
- some of Jupiter's circular surface features.
-
- Jupiter spins faster than any planet in the solar system. Though 11 times
- Earth's diameter, Jupiter spins more than twice as fast (once in 10 hours),
- giving gases on the surface extremely high rates of travel -- 22,000 mph
- at the equator, compared with 1000 mph for air at Earth's equator.
- Jupiter's rapid spin also causes this gas and liquid planet to flatten
- markedly at the poles and bulge at the equator.
-
- Visible at the top of Jupiter's atmosphere are eye-catching features
- such as the famous Great Red Spot and the exotic White Ovals, Brown
- Barges and White Plumes. The Great Red Spot, which is 25,000 miles wide
- and large enough to swallow three Earths, is an enormous oval eddy of
-
-
-
-
-
-
- swirling gases. It is driven by two counter-flowing jet streams, which
- pass, one on each side of it, moving in opposite directions, each with
- speeds of 100-200 mph. The Great Red Spot was first discovered in 1664,
- by the British scientist Roger Hook, using Galileo's telescope. In the three
- centuries since, the huge vortex has remained constant in latitude in
- Jupiter's southern equatorial belt. Because of its stable position,
- astronomers once thought it might be a volcano.
-
- Another past theory compared the Great Red Spot to a gigantic
- hurricane. However, the GRS rotates anti-cyclonically while hurricanes
- are cyclonic features (counterclockwise in the northern hemisphere,
- clockwise in the southern) -- and the dynamics of the Great Red Spot
- appear unrelated to moisture.
-
- The Great Red Spot most closely resembles an enormous tornado, a huge
- vortex that sucks in smaller vortices. The Coriolis effect created by
- Jupiter's fast spin, appears to be the key to the dynamics that drive the
- spot.
-
- The source of the Great Red Spot's color remains a mystery. Many
- scientists now believe it to be caused by phosphorus, but its spectral line
- does not quite match that of phosphorus. The GRS may be the largest in a
- whole array of spiral phenomena with similar dynamics. About a dozen
- white ovals, circulation patterns resembling the GRS, exist in the
- southern latitudes of Jupiter and appear to be driven by the same forces.
- Scientists do not know why these ovals are white.
-
- Scientists believe the brown barges, which appear like dark patches on
- the planet, are holes in the upper clouds, through which the reddish-brown
- lower cloud layer may be glimpsed. The equatorial plumes, or white
- plumes, may be a type of wispy cirrus anvil cloud.
-
-
-
-
- SPACECRAFT CHARACTERISTICS
-
-
- Orbiter Probe
-
- Mass,lbs. 5,242 744
-
- Propellant, lbs. 2,400 none
-
- Height (in-flight) 15 feet 34 inches
-
- Inflight span 30 feet
- (w/oboom)
-
- Instrument payload 10 instruments 6 instruments
-
- Payload mass, lbs. 260 66
-
- Electric power, watts 570-480 730
-
-
-
-
-
-
- (RTGs) (Lithium-sulfur battery)
-
-
-
-
-
- GALILEO MANAGEMENT
-
- The Galileo Project is managed for NASA's Office of Space Science and
- Applications by the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif. This
- responsibility includes designing, building, testing, operating and tracking
- Galileo. NASA's Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif. is responsible
- for the atmosphere probe, which was built by Hughes Aircraft Company, El
- Segundo, Calif.
-
- The probe project and science teams will be stationed at Ames during
- pre-mission, mission operations, and data reduction periods. Team
- members will be at Jet Propulsion Laboratory for probe entry.
-
- The Federal Republic of Germany has furnished the orbiter's
- retropropulsion module and is participating in the scientific
- investigations. The radioisotope thermoelectric generators were designed
- and built for the U.S. Department of Energy by the General Electric
- Company.
-
-
-
-
- GALILEO ORBITER AND PROBE SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATIONS
-
- Listed by experiment/instrument and including the Principal Investigator
- and scientific objectives of that investigation:
-
- PROBE
-
- Atmospheric Structure; A. Seiff, NASA's Ames Research Center;
- temperature, pressure, density, molecular weight profiles;
-
- Neutral Mass Spectrometer; H. Niemann, NASA's Goddard Space Flight
- Center; chemical composition
-
- Helium Abundance; U. von Zahn, Bonn University, FRG; helium/hydrogen
- ratio
-
- Nephelometer; B. Ragent, NASA's Ames Research Center; clouds,
- solid/liquid particles
-
- Net Flux Radiometer; L. Sromovsky, University of Wisconsin-Madison;
- thermal/solar energy profiles
-
- Lightning/Energetic Particles; L. Lanzerotti, Bell Laboratories; detect
- lightning, measuring energetic particles
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- ORBITER (DESPUN PLATFORM)
-
- Solid-State Imaging Camera; M. Belton, National Optical Astronomy
- Observatories (Team Leader); Galilean satellites at 1-km resolution or
- better
-
- Near-Infrared Mapping Spectrometer; R. Carlson, NASA's Jet Propulsion
- Laboratory; surface/atmospheric composition, thermal mapping
-
- Ultraviolet Spectrometer; C. Hord, University of Colorado; atmospheric
- gases, aerosols
-
- Photopolarimeter Radiometer; J. Hansen, Goddard Institute for Space
- Studies; atmospheric particles, thermal/reflected radiation
-
-
- ORBITER (SPINNING SPACECRAFT SECTION)
-
- Magnetometer; M. Kivelson, University of California at Los Angeles;
- strength and fluctuations of magnetic fields
-
- Energetic Particles; D. Williams, Johns Hopkins Applied Physics
- Laboratory; electrons, protons, heavy ions in magnetosphere and
- interplanetary space
-
- Plasma; L. Frank, University of Iowa; composition, energy, distribution of
- magnetospheric ions
-
- Plasma Wave; D. Gurnett, University of Iowa; electromagnetic waves and
- wave-particle interactions
-
- Dust; E. Grun, Max Planck Institute; mass, velocity, charge of submicron
- particles
-
- Radio Science - Celestial Mechanics; J. Anderson, JPL (Team Leader);
- masses and motions of bodies from spacecraft tracking;
-
- Radio Science - Propagation; H. T. Howard, Stanford University; satellite
- radii, atmospheric structure both from radio propagation
-
-
-
-
-
- INTERDISCIPLINARY INVESTIGATORS
-
- F. P. Fanale; University of Hawaii
-
- P. Gierasch; Cornell University
-
- D. M. Hunten; University of Arizona
-
- A. P. Ingersoll; California Institute of Technology
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- H. Masursky; U. S. Geological Survey
-
- D. Morrison; Ames Research Center
-
- M. McElroy; Harvard University
-
- G. S. Orton; NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory
-
- T. Owen; State University of New York, Stonybrook
-
- J. B. Pollack; NASA's Ames Research Center
-
- C. T Russell; University of California at Los Angeles
-
- C. Sagan; Cornell University
-
- G. Schubert; University of California at Los Angeles
-
- J. Van Allen; University of Iowa
-
-
-
-
- STS-34 INERTIAL UPPER STAGE (IUS-19)
-
- The Inertial Upper Stage (IUS) will again be used with the Space
- Shuttle, this time to transport NASA's Galileo spacecraft out of Earth's
- orbit to Jupiter, a 2.5-billion-mile journey.
-
- The IUS has been used previously to place three Tracking and Data
- Relay Satellites in geostationary orbit as well as to inject the Magellan
- spacecraft into its interplanetary trajectory to Venus. In addition, the
- IUS has been selected by the agency for the Ulysses solar polar orbit
- mission.
-
- After 2 1/2 years of competition, Boeing Aerospace Co., Seattle, was
- selected in August 1976 to begin preliminary design of the IUS. The IUS
- was developed and built under contract to the Air Force Systems
- Command's Space Systems Division. The Space Systems Division is
- executive agent for all Department of Defense activities pertaining to the
- Space Shuttle system. NASA, through the Marshall Space Flight Center,
- Huntsville, Ala., purchases the IUS through the Air Force and manages the
- integration activities of the upper stage to NASA spacecraft.
-
-
- Specifications
-
- IUS-19, to be used on mission STS-34, is a two-stage vehicle weighing
- approximately 32,500 lbs. Each stage has a solid rocket motor (SRM),
- preferred over liquid-fueled engines because of SRM's relative simplicity,
- high reliability, low cost and safety.
-
- The IUS is 17 ft. long and 9.25 ft. in diameter. It consists of an aft
- skirt, an aft stage SRM generating approximately 42,000 lbs. of thrust, an
-
-
-
-
-
-
- interstage, a forward-stage SRM generating approximately 18,000 lbs. of
- thrust, and an equipment support section.
-
-
- Airborne Support Equipment
-
- The IUS Airborne Support Equipment (ASE) is the mechanical, avionics
- and structural equipment located in the orbiter. The ASE supports the IUS
- and the Galileo in the orbiter payload bay and elevates the combination for
- final checkout and deployment from the orbiter.
-
- The IUS ASE consists of the structure, electromechanical mechanisms,
- batteries, electronics and cabling to support the Galileo/IUS. These ASE
- subsystems enable the deployment of the combined vehicle; provide,
- distribute and/or control electrical power to the IUS and spacecraft;
- provide plumbing to cool the radioisotope thermoelectric generator (RTG)
- aboard Galileo; and serve as communication paths between the IUS and/or
- spacecraft and the orbiter.
-
-
- IUS Structure
-
- The IUS structure is capable of supporting loads generated internally
- and also by the cantilevered spacecraft during orbiter operations and the
- IUS free flight. It is made of aluminum skin-stringer construction, with
- longerons and ring frames.
-
-
- Equipment Support Section
-
- The top of the equipment support section contains the spacecraft
- interface mounting ring and electrical interface connector segment for
- mating and integrating the spacecraft with the IUS. Thermal isolation is
- provided by a multilayer insulation blanket across the interface between
- the IUS and Galileo.
-
- The equipment support section also contains the avionics which
- provide guidance, navigation, control, telemetry, command and data
- management, reaction control and electrical power. All mission-critical
- components of the avionics system, along with thrust vector actuators,
- reaction control thrusters, motor igniter and pyrotechnic stage separation
- equipment are redundant to assure reliability of better than 98 percent.
-
-
- IUS Avionics Subsystems
-
- The avionics subsystems consist of the telemetry, tracking and
- command subsystems; guidance and navigation subsystem; data
- management; thrust vector control; and electrical power subsystems.
- These subsystems include all the electronic and electrical hardware used
- to perform all computations, signal conditioning, data processing and
- formatting associated with navigation, guidance, control, data and
- redundancy management. The IUS avionics subsystems also provide the
- equipment for communications between the orbiter and ground stations as
-
-
-
-
-
-
- well as electrical power distribution.
-
- Attitude control in response to guidance commands is provided by
- thrust vectoring during powered flight and by reaction control thrusters
- while coasting. Attitude is compared with guidance commands to
- generate error signals. During solid motor firing, these commands gimble
- the IUS's movable nozzle to provide the desired pitch and yaw control. The
- IUS's roll axis thrusters maintain roll control. While coasting, the error
- signals are processed in the computer to generate thruster commands to
- maintain the vehicle's altitude or to maneuver the vehicle.
-
- The IUS electrical power subsystem consists of avionics batteries, IUS
- power distribution units, a power transfer unit, utility batteries, a
- pyrotechnic switching unit, an IUS wiring harness and umbilical and
- staging connectors. The IUS avionics system provides 5-volt electrical
- power to the Galileo/IUS interface connector for use by the spacecraft
- telemetry system.
-
-
- IUS Solid Rocket Motors
-
- The IUS two-stage vehicle uses a large solid rocket motor and a small
- solid rocket motor. These motors employ movable nozzles for thrust
- vector control. The nozzles provide up to 4 degrees of steering on the
- large motor and 7 degrees on the small motor. The large motor is the
- longest-thrusting duration SRM ever developed for space, with the
- capability to thrust as long as 150 seconds. Mission requirements and
- constraints (such as weight) can be met by tailoring the amount of
- propellant carried. The IUS-19 first-stage motor will carry 21,488 lb. of
- propellant; the second stage 6,067 lb.
-
-
- Reaction Control System
-
- The reaction control system controls the Galileo/IUS spacecraft attitude
- during coasting, roll control during SRM thrustings, velocity impulses for
- accurate orbit injection and the final collision-avoidance maneuver after
- separation from the Galileo spacecraft.
-
- As a minimum, the IUS includes one reaction control fuel tank with a
- capacity of 120 lb. of hydrazine. Production options are available to add a
- second or third tank. However, IUS-19 will require only one tank.
-
-
- IUS To Spacecraft Interfaces
-
- Galileo is physically attached to the IUS at eight attachment points,
- providing substantial load-carrying capability while minimizing the
- transfer of heat across the connecting points. Power, command and data
- transmission between the two are provided by several IUS interface
- connectors. In addition, the IUS provides a multilayer insulation blanket
- of aluminized Kapton with polyester net spacers across the Galileo/IUS
- interface, along with an aluminized Beta cloth outer layer. All IUS
- thermal blankets are vented toward and into the IUS cavity, which in turn
-
-
-
-
-
-
- is vented to the orbiter payload bay. There is no gas flow between the
- spacecraft and the IUS. The thermal blankets are grounded to the IUS
- structure to prevent electrostatic charge buildup.
-
-
- Flight Sequence
-
- After the orbiter payload bay doors are opened in orbit, the orbiter will
- maintain a preselected attitude to keep the payload within thermal
- requirements and constraints.
-
- On-orbit predeployment checkout begins, followed by an IUS command link
- check and spacecraft communications command check. Orbiter trim
- maneuvers are normally performed at this time.
-
- Forward payload restraints will be released and the aft frame of the
- airborne-support equipment will tilt the Galileo/IUS to 29 degrees. This
- will extend the payload into space just outside the orbiter payload bay,
- allowing direct communication with Earth during systems checkout. The
- orbiter then will be maneuvered to the deployment attitude. If a problem
- has developed within the spacecraft or IUS, the IUS and its payload can be
- restowed.
-
- Prior to deployment, the spacecraft electrical power source will be
- switched from orbiter power to IUS internal power by the orbiter flight
- crew. After verifying that the spacecraft is on IUS internal power and
- that all Galileo/IUS predeployment operations have been successfully
- completed, a GO/NO-GO decision for deployment will be sent to the crew
- from ground support.
-
- When the orbiter flight crew is given a "Go" decision, they will
- activate the ordnance that separates the spacecraft's umbilical cables.
- The crew then will command the electromechanical tilt actuator to raise
- the tilt table to a 58-degree deployment position. The orbiter's RCS
- thrusters will be inhibited and an ordnance-separation device initiated to
- physically separate the IUS/spacecraft combination from the tilt table.
-
- Six hours, 20 minutes into the mission, compressed springs provide the
- force to jettison the IUS/Galileo from the orbiter payload bay at
- approximately 6 inches per second. The deployment is normally performed
- in the shadow of the orbiter or in Earth eclipse.
-
- The tilt table then will be lowered to minus 6 degrees after IUS and its
- spacecraft are deployed. A small orbiter maneuver is made to back away
- from IUS/Galileo. Approximately 15 minutes after deployment, the
- orbiter's OMS engines will be ignited to move the orbiter away from its
- released payload.
-
- After deployment, the IUS/Galileo is controlled by the IUS onboard
- computers. Approximately 10 minutes after IUS/Galileo deployment from
- the orbiter, the IUS onboard computer will send out signals used by the
- IUS and/or Galileo to begin mission sequence events. This signal will also
- enable the IUS reaction control system. All subsequent operations will be
- sequenced by the IUS computer, from transfer orbit injection through
-
-
-
-
-
-
- spacecraft separation and IUS deactivation.
-
- After the RCS has been activated, the IUS will maneuver to the
- required thermal attitude and perform any required spacecraft thermal
- control maneuvers.
-
- At approximately 45 minutes after deployment from the orbiter, the
- ordnance inhibits for the first SRM will be removed. The belly of the
- orbiter already will have been oriented towards the IUS/Galileo to protect
- orbiter windows from the IUS's plume. The IUS will recompute the first
- ignition time and maneuvers necessary to attain the proper attitude for
- the first thrusting period. When the proper transfer orbit opportunity is
- reached, the IUS computer will send the signal to ignite the first stage
- motor 60 minutes after deployment. After firing approximately 150
- seconds, the IUS first stage will have expended its propellant and will be
- separated from the IUS second stage.
-
- Approximately 140 seconds after first-stage burnout, the second-
- stage motor will be ignited, thrusting about 108 seconds. The IUS second
- stage then will separate and perform a final collision/contamination
- avoidance maneuver before deactivating.
-
-
-
-
- SHUTTLE SOLAR BACKSCATTER ULTRAVIOLET INSTRUMENT
-
- The Shuttle Solar Backscatter Ultraviolet (SSBUV) instrument was
- developed by NASA to calibrate similar ozone measuring space-based
- instruments on the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's
- TIROS satellites (NOAA-9 and -11).
-
- The SSBUV will help scientists solve the problem of data reliability
- caused by calibration drift of solar backscatter ultraviolet (SBUV)
- instruments on orbiting spacecraft. The SSBUV uses the Space Shuttle's
- orbital flight path to assess instrument performance by directly
- comparing data from identical instruments aboard the TIROS spacecraft,
- as the Shuttle and the satellite pass over the same Earth location within a
- 1-hour window. These orbital coincidences can occur 17 times per day.
-
- The SBUV measures the amount and height distribution of ozone in the
- upper atmosphere. It does this by measuring incident solar ultraviolet
- radiation and ultraviolet radiation backscattered from the Earth's
- atmosphere. The SBUV measures these parameters in 12 discrete
- wavelength channels in the ultraviolet. Because ozone absorbs in the
- ultraviolet, an ozone measurement can be derived from the ratio of
- backscatter radiation at different wavelengths, providing an index of the
- vertical distribution of ozone in the atmosphere.
-
- Global concern over the depletion of the ozone layer has sparked
- increased emphasis on developing and improving ozone measurement
- methods and instruments. Accurate, reliable measurements from space
- are critical to the detection of ozone trends and for assessing the
- potential effects and development of corrective measures.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- The SSBUV missions are so important to the support of Earth science
- that six additional missions have been added to the Shuttle manifest for
- calibrating ozone instruments on future TIROS satellites. In addition, the
- dates of the four previously manifested SSBUV flights have been
- accelerated.
-
- The SSBUV instrument and its dedicated electronics, power, data and
- command systems are mounted in the Shuttle's payload bay in two Get
- Away Special canisters, an instrument canister and a support canister.
- Together, they weigh approximately 1200 lb. The instrument canister
- holds the SSBUV, its specially designed aspect sensors and in-flight
- calibration system. A motorized door assembly opens the canister to
- allow the SSBUV to view the sun and Earth and closes during the in-flight
- calibration sequence.
-
- The support canister contains the power system, data storage and
- command decoders. The dedicated power system can operate the SSBUV
- for a total of approximately 40 hours.
-
- The SSBUV is managed by NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center,
- Greenbelt, Md. Ernest Hilsenrath is the principal investigator.
-
-
-
-
-
- GROWTH HORMONE CONCENTRATIONS AND DISTRIBUTION IN PLANTS
-
- The Growth Hormone Concentration and Distribution in Plants (GHCD)
- experiment is designed to determine the effects of microgravity on the
- concentration, turnover properties, and behavior of the plant growth
- hormone, Auxin, in corn shoot tissue (Zea Mays).
-
- Mounted in foam blocks inside two standard middeck lockers, the
- equipment consists of four plant cannisters, two gaseous nitrogen
- freezers and two temperature recorders. Equipment for the experiment,
- excluding the lockers, weighs 97.5 pounds.
-
- A total of 228 specimens (Zea Mays seeds) are "planted" in special
- filter, paper-Teflon tube holders no more than 56 hours prior to flight.
- The seeds remain in total darkness throughout the mission.
-
- The GHCD experiment equipment and specimens will be prepared in a
- Payload Processing Facility at KSC and placed in the middeck lockers. The
- GHCD lockers will be installed in the orbiter middeck within the last 14
- hours before launch.
-
- No sooner than 72 hours after launch, mission specialist Ellen Baker
- will place two of the plant cannisters into the gaseous nitrogen freezers
- to arrest the plant growth and preserve the specimens. The payload will
- be restowed in the lockers for the remainder of the mission.
-
- After landing, the payload must be removed from the orbiter within 2
-
-
-
-
-
-
- hours and will be returned to customer representatives at the landing site.
- The specimens will be examined post flight for microgravity effects.
-
- The GHCD experiment is sponsored by NASA Headquarters, the Johnson
- Space Center and Michigan State University.
-
-
-
-
- POLYMER MORPHOLOGY
-
- The Polymer Morphology (PM) experiment is a 3M-developed organic
- materials processing experiment designed to explore the effects of
- microgravity on polymeric materials as they are processed in space.
-
- Since melt processing is one of the more industrially significant
- methods for making products from polymers, it has been chosen for study
- in the PM experiment. Key aspects of melt processing include
- polymerization, crystallization and phase separation. Each aspect will be
- examined in the experiment. The polymeric systems for the first flight of
- PM include polyethelyne, nylon-6 and polymer blends.
-
- The apparatus for the experiment includes a Fournier transform
- infrared (FTIR) spectrometer, an automatic sample manipulating system
- and a process control and data acquisition computer known as the Generic
- Electronics Module (GEM). The experiment is contained in two separate,
- hermetically sealed containers that are mounted in the middeck of the
- orbiter. Each container includes an integral heat exchanger that transfers
- heat from the interior of the containers to the orbiter's environment. All
- sample materials are kept in triple containers for the safety of the
- astronauts.
-
- The PM experiment weighs approximately 200 lb., occupies three
- standard middeck locker spaces (6 cubic ft., total) in the orbiter and
- requires 240 watts to operate.
-
- Mission specialists Franklin R. Chang-Diaz and Shannon W. Lucid are
- responsible for the operation of the PM experiment on orbit. Their
- interface with the PM experiment is through a small, NASA-supplied
- laptop computer that is used as an input and output device for the main PM
- computer. This interface has been programmed by 3M engineers to manage
- and display the large quantity of data that is available to the crew. The
- astronauts will have an active role in the operation of the experiment.
-
- In the PM experiment, infrared spectra (400 to 5000 cm-1) will be
- acquired from the FTIR by the GEM computer once every 3.2 seconds as the
- materials are processed on orbit. During the 100 hours of processing
- time, approximately 2 gigabytes of data will be collected. Post flight, 3M
- scientists will process the data to reveal the effects of microgravity on
- the samples processed in space.
-
- The PM experiment is unique among material processing experiments in
- that measurements characterizing the effects of microgravity will be
- made in real time, as the materials are processed in space.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- In most materials processing space experiments, the materials have
- been processed in space with little or no measurements made during
- on-orbit processing and the effects of microgravity determined post
- facto.
-
- The samples of polymeric materials being studied in the PM experiment
- are thin films (25 microns or less) approximately 25 mm in diameter. The
- samples are mounted between two infrared transparent windows in a
- specially designed infrared cell that provides the capability of thermally
- processing the samples to 200 degrees Celsius with a high degree of
- thermal control. The samples are mounted on a carousel that allows them
- to be positioned, one at a time, in the infrared beam where spectra may be
- acquired. The GEM provides all carousel and sample cell control. The first
- flight of PM will contain 17 samples.
-
- The PM experiment is being conducted by 3M's Space Research and
- Applications Laboratory. Dr. Earl L. Cook is 3M's Payload Representative
- and Mission Coordinator. Dr. Debra L. Wilfong is PM's Science Coordinator,
- and James E. Steffen is the Hardware Coordinator.
-
- The PM experiment, a commercial development payload, is sponsored by
- NASA's Office of Commercial Programs. The PM experiment will be 3M's
- fifth space experiment and the first under the company's 10-year Joint
- Endeavor Agreement with NASA for 62 flight experiment opportunities.
- Previous 3M space experiments have studied organic crystal growth from
- solution (DMOS/1 on mission STS 51-A and DMOS/2 on STS 61-B) and
- organic thin film growth by physical vapor treatment (PVTOS/1 on STS
- 51-I and PVTOS/2 on mission STS-26).
-
-
-
-
- STUDENT EXPERIMENT
-
- Zero Gravity Growth of Ice Crystals From Supercooled Water With Relation
- To Temperature (SE82-15)
-
- This experiment, proposed by Tracy L. Peters, formerly of Ygnacio High
- School, Concord, Calif., will observe the geometric ice crystal shapes
- formed at supercooled temperatures, below 0 degrees Celsius, without the
- influence of gravity.
-
- Liquid water has been discovered at temperatures far below water's
- freezing point. This phonomenon occurs because liquid water does not
- have a nucleus, or core, around which to form the crystal. When the ice
- freezes at supercold temperatures, the ice takes on many geometric
- shapes based on the hexagon. The shape of the crystal primarily depends
- on the supercooled temperature and saturation of water vapor. The shapes
- of crystals vary from simple plates to complex prismatic crystals.
-
- Many scientists have tried to determine the relation between
- temperature and geometry, but gravity has deformed crystals, caused
- convection currents in temperature-controlled apparatus, and caused
-
-
-
-
-
-
- faults in the crystalline structure. These all affect crystal growth by
- either rapid fluctuations of temperature or gravitational influence of the
- crystal geometry.
-
- The results of this experiment could aid in the design of radiator cooling
- and cryogenic systems and in the understanding of high-altitude
- meteorology and planetary ring structure theories.
-
- Peters is now studying physics at the University of California at Berkeley.
- His teacher advisor is James R. Cobb, Ygnacio High School; his sponsor is
- Boeing Aerospace Corp., Seattle.
-
- Peters also was honored as the first four-time NASA award winner at the
- International Science and Engineering Fair (ISEF), which recognizes
- student's creative scientific endeavors in aerospace research. At the
- 1982 ISEF, Peters was one of two recipients of the Glen T. Seaborg Nobel
- Prize Visit Award, an all-expense-paid visit to Stockholm to attend the
- Nobel Prize ceremonies, for his project "Penetration and Diffusion of
- Supersonic Fluid."
-
-
-
-
- MESOSCALE LIGHTNING EXPERIMENT
-
- The Space Shuttle will again carry the Mesoscale Lightning Experiment
- (MLE), designed to obtain nighttime images of lightning in order to better
- understand the global distribution of lightning, the interrelationships
- between lightning events in nearby storms, and relationships between
- lightning, convective storms and precipitation.
-
- A better understanding of the relationships between lightning and
- thunderstorm characteristics can lead to the development of applications
- in severe storm warning and forecasting, and early warning systems for
- lightning threats to life and property.
-
- In recent years, NASA has used both Space Shuttle missions and
- high-altitude U-2 aircraft to observe lightning from above convective
- storms. The objectives of these observations have been to determine
- some of the baseline design requirements for a satellite-borne optical
- lightning mapper sensor; study the overall optical and electrical
- characteristics of lightning as viewed from above the cloudtop; and
- investigate the relationship between storm electrical development and
- the structure, dynamics and evolution of thunderstorms and thunderstorm
- systems.
-
- The MLE began as an experiment to demonstrate that meaningful,
- qualitative observations of lightning could be made from the Shuttle.
- Having accomplished this, the experiment is now focusing on quantitative
- measurements of lightning characteristics and observation simulations
- for future space-based lightning sensors.
-
- Data from the MLE will provide information for the development of
- observation simulations for an upcoming polar platform and Space Station
-
-
-
-
-
-
- instrument, the Lightning Imaging Sensor (LIS). The lightning experiment
- also will be helpful for designing procedures for using the Lightning
- Mapper Sensor (LMS), planned for several geostationary platforms.
-
- In this experiment, Atlantis' payload bay camera will be pointed
- directly below the orbiter to observe nighttime lightning in large, or
- mesoscale, storm systems to gather global estimates of lightning as
- observed from Shuttle altitudes. Scientists on the ground will analyze the
- imagery for the frequency of lightning flashes in active storm clouds
- within the camera's field of view, the length of lightning discharges, and
- cloud brightness when illuminated by the lightning discharge within the
- cloud.
-
- If time permits during missions, astronauts also will use a handheld
- 35mm camera to photograph lightning activity in storm systems not
- directly below the Shuttle's orbital track.
-
- Data from the MLE will be associated with ongoing observations of
- lightning made at several locations on the ground, including observations
- made at facilities at the Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.;
- Kennedy Space Center, Fla.; and the NOAA Severe Storms Laboratory,
- Norman, Okla. Other ground-based lightning detection systems in
- Australia, South America and Africa will be intergrated when possible.
-
- The MLE is managed by the Marshall Space Flight Center. Otha H. Vaughan
- Jr., is coordinating the experiment. Dr. Hugh Christian is the project
- scientist, and Dr. James Arnold is the project manager.
-
-
-
-
- IMAX
-
- The IMAX project is a collaboration between NASA and the Smithsonian
- Institution's National Air and Space Museum to document significant space
- activities using the IMAX film medium. This system, developed by the
- IMAX Systems Corp., Toronto, Canada, uses specially designed 70mm film
- cameras and projectors to record and display very high definition
- large-screen color motion pictures.
-
- IMAX cameras previously have flown on Space Shuttle missions 41-C,
- 41-D and 41-G to document crew operations in the payload bay and the
- orbiter's middeck and flight deck along with spectacular views of space
- and Earth.
-
- Film from those missions form the basis for the IMAX production, "The
- Dream is Alive." On STS 61-B, an IMAX camera mounted in the payload bay
- recorded extravehicular activities in the EAS/ACCESS space construction
- demonstrations.
-
- The IMAX camera, most recently carried aboard STS-29, will be used on
- this mission to cover the deployment of the Galileo spacecraft and to
- gather material on the use of observations of the Earth from space for
- future IMAX films.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- AIR FORCE MAUI OPTICAL SITE CALIBRATION TEST
-
- The Air Force Maui Optical Site (AMOS) tests allow ground-based
- electro-optical sensors located on Mt. Haleakala, Maui, Hawaii, to collect
- imagery and signature data of the orbiter during cooperative overflights.
- Scientific observations made of the orbiter while performing Reaction
- Control System thruster firings, water dumps or payload bay light
- activation are used to support the calibration of the AMOS sensors and the
- validation of spacecraft contamination models. AMOS tests have no
- payload-unique flight hardware and only require that the orbiter be in
- predefined attitude operations and lighting conditions.
-
- The AMOS facility was developed by Air Force Systems Command
- (AFSC) through its Rome Air Development Center, Griffiss Air Force Base,
- N.Y., and is administered and operated by the AVCO Everett Research
- Laboratory, Maui. The principal investigator for the AMOS tests on the
- Space Shuttle is from AFSC's Air Force Geophysics Laboratory, Hanscom
- Air Force Base, Mass. A co-principal investigator is from AVCO.
-
- Flight planning and mission support activities for the AMOS test
- opportunities are provided by a detachment of AFSC's Space Systems
- Division at Johnson Space Center, Houston. Flight operations are
- conducted at JSC Mission Control Center in coordination with the AMOS
- facilities located in Hawaii.
-
-
-
-
- SENSOR TECHNOLOGY EXPERIMENT
-
- The Sensor Technology Experiment (STEX) is a radiation detection
- experiment designed to measure the natural radiation background. The
- STEX is a self-contained experiment with its own power, sensor, computer
- control and data storage. A calibration pack, composed of a small number
- of passive threshold reaction monitors, is attached to the outside of the
- STEX package.
-
- Sponsored by the Strategic Defense Initiative Organization, the STEX
- package weighs approximately 50 pounds and is stowed in a standard
- middeck locker throughout the flight.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- PAYLOAD AND VEHICLE WEIGHTS
-
- Vehicle/Payload Weight (Pounds)
-
- Orbiter (Atlantis) Empty 172,018
-
- Galileo/IUS (payload bay) 43,980
-
- Galileo support hardware (middeck) 59
-
- SSBUV (payload bay) 637
-
- SSBUV support 578
-
- DSO 49
-
- DTO 170
-
- GHCD 130
-
- IMAX 269
-
- MLE 15
-
- PM 219
-
- >SSIP 70
-
- STEX 52
-
- Orbiter and Cargo at SRB Ignition 264,775
-
- Total Vehicle at SRB Ignition 4,523,810
-
- Orbiter Landing Weight 195,283
-
-
-
-
-
- SPACEFLIGHT TRACKING AND DATA NETWORK
-
- Primary communications for most activities on STS-34 will be
- conducted through the orbiting Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System
- (TDRSS), a constellation of three communications satellites in
- geosynchronous orbit 22,300 miles above the Earth. In addition, three
- NASA Spaceflight Tracking and Data Network (STDN) ground stations and
- the NASA Communications Network (NASCOM), both managed by Goddard
- Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., will play key roles in the mission.
-
- Three stations -- Merritt Island and Ponce de Leon, Florida and the
- Bermuda -- serve as the primary communications during the launch and
- ascent phases of the mission. For the first 80 seconds, all voice,
- telemetry and other communications from the Space Shuttle are relayed to
-
-
-
-
-
-
- the mission managers at Kennedy and Johnson Space Centers by way of the
- Merritt Island facility.
-
- At 80 seconds, the communications are picked up from the Shuttle and
- relayed to the two NASA centers from the Ponce de Leon facility, 30 miles
- north of the launch pad. This facility provides the communications
- between the Shuttle and the centers for 70 seconds, or until 150 seconds
- into the mission. This is during a critical period when exhaust from the
- solid rocket motors "blocks out" the Merritt Island antennas.
-
- The Merritt Island facility resumes communications to and from the
- Shuttle after those 70 seconds and maintains them until 6 minutes, 30
- seconds after launch when communications are "switched over" to
- Bermuda. Bermuda then provides the communications until 11 minutes
- after liftoff when the TDRS-East satellite acquires the Shuttle.
- TDRS-West acquires the orbiter at launch plus 50 minutes.
-
- The TDRS-East and -West satellites will provide communications with
- the Shuttle during 85 percent or better of each orbit. The TDRS-West
- satellite will handle communications with the Shuttle during its descent
- and landing phases.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- STS-34 CARGO CONFIGURATION (illustration)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- CREW BIOGRAPHIES
-
-
- Donald E. Williams, 47, Capt., USN, will serve as commander. Selected
- as an astronaut in January 1978, he was born in Lafayette, Ind.
-
- Williams was pilot for STS-51D, the fourth flight of Discovery,
- launched April 12, 1985. During the mission, the seven-member crew
- deployed the Anik-C communications satellite for Telesat of Canada and
- the Syncom IV-3 satellite for the U.S. Navy. A malfunction in the Syncom
- spacecraft resulted in the first unscheduled extravehicular, rendezvous
- and proximity operation for the Space Shuttle in an attempt to activate
- the satellite.
-
- He graduated from Otterbein High School, Otterbein, Ind., in 1960 and
- received his B.S. degree in mechanical engineering from Purdue University
- in 1964. Williams completed his flight training at Pensacola, Fla.,
- Meridian, Miss., and Kingsville, Texas, and earned his wings in 1966.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- During the Vietnam Conflict, Williams completed 330 combat missions.
- He has logged more than 5,400 hours flying time, including 5,100 in jets,
- and 745 aircraft carrier landings.
-
-
-
- Michael J. McCulley, 46, Cdr., USN, will be pilot on this flight. Born in
- San Diego, McCulley considers Livingston, Tenn., his hometown. He was
- selected as a NASA astronaut in 1984. He is making his first Space
- Shuttle flight.
-
- McCulley graduated from Livingston Academy in 1961. He received B.S.
- and M.S. degrees in metallurgical engineering from Purdue University in
- 1970.
-
- After graduating from high school, McCulley enlisted in the U.S. Navy
- and subsequently served on one diesel-powered and two nuclear-powered
- submarines. Following flight training, he served tours of duty in A-4 and
- A-65 aircraft and was selected to attend the Empire Test Pilots School in
- Great Britain. He served in a variety of test pilot billets at the Naval Air
- Test Center, Patuxent River, Md., before returning to sea duty on the USS
- Saratoga and USS Nimitz.
-
- He has flown more than 50 types of aircraft, logging more than 4,760
- hours, and has almost 400 carrier landings on six aircraft carriers.
-
-
-
- Shannon W. Lucid, 46, will serve as mission specialist (MS-1) on this,
- her second Shuttle flight. Born in Shanghai, China, she considers Bethany,
- Okla., her hometown. Lucid is a member of the astronaut class of 1978.
-
- Lucid's first Shuttle mission was during STS 51-G, launched from the
- Kennedy Space Center on June 17, 1985. During that flight, the crew
- deployed communications satellites for Mexico, the Arab League and the
- United States.
-
- Lucid graduated from Bethany High School in 1960. She then attended
- the University of Oklahoma where she received a B.S. degree in chemistry
- in 1963, an M.S. degree in biochemistry in 1970 and a Ph.D. in biochemistry
- in 1973.
-
- Before joining NASA, Lucid held a variety of academic assignments
- such as teaching assistant at the University of Oklahoma's department of
- chemistry; senior laboratory technician at the Oklahoma Medical Research
- Foundation; chemist at Kerr-McGee in Oklahoma City; graduate assistant in
- the University of Oklahoma Health Science Center's department of
- biochemistry; and molecular biology and research associate with the
- Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation in Oklahoma City. Lucid also is a
- commercial, instrument and multi-engine rated pilot.
-
-
-
- Franklin Chang-Diaz, 39, will serve as MS-2. Born in San Jose, Costa
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Rica, Chang-Diaz also will be making his second flight since being
- selected as an astronaut in 1980.
-
- Chang-Diaz made his first flight aboard Columbia on mission STS 61-C,
- launched from KSC Jan. 12, 1986. During the 6-day flight he participated
- in the deployment of the SATCOM KU satellite, conducted experiments in
- astrophysics and operated the materials science laboratory, MSL-2.
-
- Chang-Diaz graduated from Colegio De La Salle, San Jose, Costa Rica, in
- 1967, and from Hartford High School, Hartford, Conn., in 1969. He received
- a B.S. degree in mechanical engineering from the University of Connecticut
- in 1973 and a Ph.D. in applied plasma physics from the Massachusetts
- Institute of Technology in 1977.
-
- While attending the University of Connecticut, Chang-Diaz also worked
- as a research assistant in the physics department and participated in the
- design and construction of high-energy atomic collision experiments.
- Upon entering graduate school at MIT, he became heavily involved in the
- United State's controlled fusion program and conducted intensive research
- in the design and operation of fusion reactors. In 1979, he developed a
- novel concept to guide and target fuel pellets in an inertial fusion reactor
- chamber. In 1983, he was appointed as visiting scientist with the MIT
- Plasma Fusion Center which he visits periodically to continue his research
- on advanced plasma rockets.
-
- Chang-Diaz has logged more than 1,500 hours of flight time, including
- 1,300 hours in jet aircraft.
-
-
-
- Ellen S. Baker, 36, will serve as MS-3. She will be making her first
- Shuttle flight. Baker was born in Fayetteville, N.C., and was selected as
- an astronaut in 1984.
-
- Baker graduated from Bayside High School, New York, N.Y., in 1970. She
- received a B.A. degree in geology from the State University of New York at
- Buffalo in 1974, and an M.D. from Cornell University in 1978.
-
- After medical school, Baker trained in internal medicine at the
- University of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio, Texas. In 1981,
- she was certified by the American Board of Internal Medicine.
-
- Baker joined NASA as a medical officer at the Johnson Space Center in
- 1981 after completing her residency. That same year, she graduated with
- honors from the Air Force Aerospace Medicine Primary Course at Brooks
- Air Force Base in San Antonio. Prior to her selection as an astronaut, she
- served as a physician in the Flight Medicine Clinic at JSC.
-
-
-
- NASA PROGRAM MANAGEMENT
-
-
- NASA Headquarters
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Washington, D.C.
-
- Richard H. Truly
- NASA Administrator
-
- James R. Thompson Jr.
- NASA Deputy Administrator
-
- William B. Lenoir
- Acting Associate Administrator for Space Flight
-
- George W.S. Abbey
- Deputy Associate Administrator for Space Flight
-
- Arnold D. Aldrich
- Director, National Space Transportation Program
-
- Leonard S. Nicholson
- Deputy Director, NSTS Program
- (located at Johnson Space Center)
-
- Robert L. Crippen
- Deputy Director, NSTS Operations
- (located at Kennedy Space Center)
-
- David L. Winterhalter
- Director, Systems Engineering and Analyses
-
- Gary E. Krier
- Director, Operations Utilization
-
- Joseph B. Mahon
- Deputy Associate Administrator
- for Space Flight (Flight Systems)
-
- Charles R. Gunn
- Director, Unmanned Launch Vehicles
- and Upper Stages
-
- George A. Rodney
- Associate Administrator for Safety, Reliability,
- Maintainability and Quality Assurance
-
- Charles T. Force
- Associate Administrator for Operations
-
- Dr. Lennard A. Fisk
- Associate Administrator for Space Science
- and Applications
-
- Samuel Keller
- Assistant Deputy Associate Administrator
- NASA Headquarters
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Al Diaz
- Deputy Associate Administrator for
- Space Science and Applications
-
- Dr. Geoffrey A. Briggs
- Director, Solar System Exploration Division
-
- Robert F. Murray
- Manager, Galileo Program
-
- Dr. Joseph Boyce
- Galileo Program Scientist
-
-
-
- Johnson Space Center
- Houston, Texas
-
- Aaron Cohen
- Director
-
- Paul J. Weitz
- Deputy Director
-
- Richard A. Colonna
- Manager, Orbiter and GFE Projects
-
- Donald R. Puddy
- Director, Flight Crew Operations
-
- Eugene F. Kranz
- Director, Mission Operations
-
- Henry O. Pohl
- Director, Engineering
-
- Charles S. Harlan
- Director, Safety, Reliability and Quality Assurance
-
-
-
-
- Kennedy Space Center
- Florida
-
- Forrest S. McCartney
- Director
-
- Thomas E. Utsman
- Deputy Director
-
- Jay F. Honeycutt
- Director, Shuttle Management
- and Operations
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Robert B. Sieck
- Launch Director
-
- George T. Sasseen
- Shuttle Engineering Director
-
- Conrad G. Nagel
- Atlantis Flow Director
-
- James A. Thomas
- Director, Safety, Reliability and
- Quality Assurance
-
- John T. Conway
- Director, Payload Managerment
- and Operations
-
-
-
- Marshall Space Flight Center
- Huntsville, Ala.
-
- Thomas J. Lee
- Director
-
- Dr. J. Wayne Littles
- Deputy Director
-
- G. Porter Bridwell
- Manager, Shuttle Projects Office
-
- Dr. George F. McDonough
- Director, Science and Engineering
-
- Alexander A. McCool
- Director, Safety, Reliability and Quality Assurance
-
- Royce E. Mitchell
- Manager, Solid Rocket Motor Project
-
- Cary H. Rutland
- Manager, Solid Rocket Booster Project
-
- Jerry W. Smelser
- Manager, Space Shuttle Main Engine Project
-
- G. Porter Bridwell
- Acting Manager, External Tank Project
-
- Sidney P. Saucier
- Manager, Space Systems Projects Office
- [for IUS]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Stennis Space Center
- Bay St. Louis, Miss.
-
- Roy S. Estess
- Director
-
- Gerald W. Smith
- Deputy Director
-
- William F. Taylor
- Associate Director
-
- J. Harry Guin
- Director, Propulsion Test Operations
-
- Edward L. Tilton III
- Director, Science and Technology Laboratory
-
- John L. Gasery Jr.
- Chief, Safety/Quality Assurance
- and Occupational Health
-
-
-
- Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- Pasadena, Calif.
-
- Dr. Lew Allen
- Director
-
- Dr. Peter T. Lyman
- Deputy Director
-
- Gene Giberson
- Laboratory Director for Flight Projects
-
- John Casani
- Assistant Laboratory Director for Flight Projects
-
- Richard J. Spehalski
- Manager, Galileo Project
-
- William J. O'Neil
- Manager, Science and Mission Design,
- Galileo Project
-
- Dr. Clayne M. Yeates
- Deputy Manager, Science and Mission Design,
- Galileo Project
-
- Dr. Torrence V Johnson
- Galileo Project Scientist
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Neal E. Ausman Jr.
- Mission Operations and Engineering Manager
- Galileo Project
-
- A. Earl Cherniack
- Orbiter Spacecraft Manager
- Galileo Project
-
- Matthew R. Landano
- Deputy Orbiter Spacecraft Manager
- Galileo Project
-
- William G. Fawcett
- Orbiter Science Payload Manager
- Galileo Project
-
-
-
-
- Ames Research Center
- Mountain View, Calif.
-
- Dr. Dale L. Compton
- Acting Director
-
- Dr. Joseph C. Sharp
- Acting Director, Space Research Directorate
-
- Joel Sperans
- Chief, Space Exploration Projects Office
-
- Benny Chin
- Probe Manager
- Galileo Project
-
- Dr. Lawrence Colin
- Probe Scientist
- Galileo Project
-
- Dr. Richard E. Young
- Probe Scientist
- Galileo Project
-
-
-
- Ames-Dryden Flight Research Facility
- Edwards, Calif.
-
- Martin A. Knutson
- Site Manager
-
- Theodore G. Ayers
- Deputy Site Manager
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Thomas C. McMurtry
- Chief, Research Aircraft Operations Division
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Larry C. Barnett
- Chief, Shuttle Support Office
-
-
-
- Goddard Space Flight Center
- Greenbelt, Md.
-
- Dr. John W. Townsend
- Director
-
- Peter Burr
- Director, Flight Projects
-
- Dale L. Fahnestock
- Director, Mission Operations and Data Systems
-
- Daniel A. Spintman
- Chief, Networks Division
-
- Gary A. Morse
- Network Director
-
- Dr. Robert D. Hudson
- Head, Atmospheric Chemistry and Dynamics
-
- Ernest Hilsenrath
- SSBUV Principal Investigator
-
- Jon R. Busse
- Director, Engineering Directorate
-
- Robert C. Weaver Jr.
- Chief, Special Payloads Division
-
- Neal F. Barthelme
- SSBUV Mission Manager