Posted on 07/01/2014 2:15:20 PM PDT by Jack Hydrazine
NASA's first spacecraft dedicated to measuring carbon dioxide in Earth's atmosphere, a critical new data-gathering project for scientists and policy-makers, is awaiting launch Wednesday morning on a Delta 2 rocket.
The launch of NASA's OCO-2 has been rescheduled for Wed, July 2, at 2:56 a.m. PDT (0956 GMT) from Vandenberg AFB, Calif.
Rocket: Delta 2
Variant: 7320-10C
Payload: OCO-2
Date: July 2, 2014
Time: 2:56 a.m. PDT (5:56 a.m. EDT/0956 GMT)
Site: SLC-2, Vandenberg AFB, California
Watch the launch like at the link above or here or here or here or here starting at 12:45 a.m. PDT/3:45 a.m. EDT,
Launch Updates: To keep up to speed with updates to the launch countdown, dial the ULA launch hotline at 1-877-852-4321 or join the conversation at Facebook and Twitter to get text message updates on your cellphone. U.S. readers can also sign up from their phone by texting "follow spaceflightnow" to 40404. (Standard text messaging charges apply.)
NASA-JPL mission web page.
Delta II OCO-2 Mission Brochure in PDF format
Orbiting Carbon Observatory wiki link.
The Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO) is a NASA satellite mission intended to provide global space-based observations of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2). The original spacecraft was lost in a launch failure on February 24, 2009, when the payload fairing of the Taurus rocket which was carrying it failed to separate during ascent.[1] The added mass of the fairing prevented the satellite from reaching orbit.[2] It subsequently re-entered the atmosphere and crashed into the Indian Ocean near Antarctica.[3][4] The replacement satellite, Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 (OCO-2), is now scheduled to be launched July 2, 2014 aboard a Delta II rocket, following a July 1 scrubbed launch.
Launch statistics:
The OCO-2 satellite will become the 228th primary payload put into space by the venerable Delta 2 rocket over the past 25 years. Here's a look at some other stats about today's mission. This will be:
The 367th Delta rocket launch since 1960
The 234th Delta launch with NASA involvement
The 152nd Delta 2 rocket mission since 1989
The 11th Delta 2 to fly in the 7320 configuration
The 51st Delta 2 mission overseen by NASA
The 42nd Delta 2 rocket launch from Vandenberg AFB
The 3rd launch of the Delta family in 2014
The 7th United Launch Alliance flight this year
The 84th ULA launch overall
Last night's launch attempt:
Dunn said an engineer responsible for the water system could not verify that the deluge system was operating normally, resulting in a mandatory hold in the countdown at about T-minus 45 seconds.
"What that deluge system does is it protects the launch mount from the high temperatures of the launch, and it gives some amount of suppression from that huge shockwave from the ignition of the engine," Dunn said.
"It's a bit of a disappointment for the launch team when you have a great countdown up to that point," Dunn said. "However, these are things we prepare for. We're a professional team. We know how to handle this."
NASA suffered a major scientific and financial disaster in 2009 when a rocket carrying the original satellite plummeted into the waters off Antarctica minutes after soaring from Vandenberg Air Force Base along the central California coast.
After the 2009 failure, a team of experts appointed by NASA traced the problem to a piece of rocket hardware the nose cone protecting the satellite that did not separate as planned. The extra weight prevented Orbital Sciences Corp.s Taurus XL rocket from reaching orbit.
Two years later, it happened again. Despite a design change, NASAs Glory satellite was lost aboard another Taurus XL rocket. The mission was supposed to study solar radiation and airborne particles that reflect and trap sunlight.
The back-to-back fiascos led NASA to choose the Delta 2 rocket made by United Launch Alliance, a joint venture of Lockheed Martin and Boeing Co. The Delta 2 had faced an uncertain future after its main client, the U.S. Air Force, switched to the more powerful Delta 4.
http://www.lewistownsentinel.com/page/content.detail/id/537860/NASA-to-launch-global-warming-satellite-after-loss.html?isap=1&nav=5016
(Thanks to deks for posting this on the previous thread I posted about the launch attempt last night.)
I’m hoping that this third attempt at lofting a CO2-monitoring sat is a crash and burn!
It is a waste of money. NASA has been completely corrupt in this global warming scam. Also, the trip to the moon was a gigantic boondoggle. At least we the price scan devices one now sees at the supermarket checkout line for this /sarc
Did they load the carbon emitter device next to the carbon emissions detector?
Really....
I wonder what sort of fudging software they have wired into the detector to make sure they get “accurate” results.
There are about 17 of these sensing satellites in orbit. Mostly staring at the earth but 2 or 3 staring at the sun.
PBS Nova did a 2 hour show on this a while back and it is remarkable what they are learning about how the earth works.
NASA is corrupt. When Pres. Eisenhower talked about the military industrial complex, he was referring, in part, to the space program if the "Politically Incorrect Guide to the Sixties" is to be believed.
But on the other hand there is a lot to learn about the carbon-oxygen cycle which makes this new satellite useful.
You can bet your ass that the onboard software was tweaked to give the global whining types just the data they want. And what better place to hide your criminal intent than to launch it into orbit?
Delta 2 rocket launch from Vandenburg... 4 minutes from now.
Live stream video. . .
http://www.ulalaunch.com/nasa.aspx
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.