NASA once again postponed the launch of the
Demonstration of Autonomous Rendezvous Technology (DART) spacecraft Thursday due
to the discovery of contamination inside the fairing of its Pegasus launch
vehicle.
The launch team does not expect to launch before Nov.
4, 2004.
During the final flight preparations for the
DART/Pegasus launch, closeout team members discovered pieces of aluminum foil
from the launch vehicle's fairing. As a result, the vehicle will be
removed from the carrier aircraft and returned to the vehicle assembly
building, where it will be inspected.
The DART mission was postponed twice this week. The
first postponement Tuesday was due to a dropout of Global Positioning Satellite
(GPS) data of the target vehicle as well as weather fears. The GPS communication
glitch was resolved.
DART is expected to launch from the air atop a
four-stage Orbital Sciences Pegasus XL rocket in a flight staged from
California's Vandenberg Air Force Base. A former passenger jet, Stargazer
L-1011, will carry the rocket into launch position 40,000 feet (12,192 meters)
above the Pacific Ocean.
NASA researchers believe the autonomous capabilities
tested by DART will lay the foundation for future missions beyond Earth orbit,
where an autopilot -- instead of real-time remote control -- may be more
preferable during dockings. The mission is cooperative effort between NASA
researchers and the Orbital Sciences Corporation (OSC), which developed the
spacecraft.
While DART's launch marks the first flight of a
U.S.-built unmanned rendezvous space vehicle, though the Russian Federal Space
Agency's Progress and Soyuz vehicles have docked autonomously with space
stations for years. Europe is also planning to launch the cargo ship Jules
Verne, the first of its Automated Transfer Vehicles (ATV) to the International
Space Station next year.
At the heart of the DART mission is a device called
an advanced video guidance sensor (AVGS), which combines advanced optical and
electronic ranging systems to approach its satellite target -- the Multiple
Paths Beyond Line-of-Site Communications (MUBLCOM) spacecraft launched in
1999.
GPS is used to aid DART's rendezvous, and onboard
software will test collision avoidance maneuvers, and direct the spacecraft to
fly circles around MUBLCOM. An onboard camera will hopefully catch images of the
rendezvous.