One year after NASA postponed until 2012 the launch
of the key spacecraft in a proposed constellation of rain-measuring satellites,
the U.S. space agency is now talking about launching the core satellite in
2010.
To make the earlier launch date without pumping
additional money into the Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) mission, NASA
would abandon plans to develop a state of the art satellite platform made of
lightweight composites and instead buy a proven satellite design from one of
three U.S. spacecraft builders.
GPM is a joint mission with the Japanese Aerospace
Exploration Agency (JAXA) and other international agencies to develop a
constellation of satellites that will measure precipitation, a key factor in
climate studies, on a global scale. The constellation is being designed to
provide data with more frequency and greater accuracy than any system or
satellite launched to date.
NASA and JAXA have been collaborating for several
years on the development of a core satellite carrying a Japanese-built
precipitation radar and a U.S.-built precipitation microwave radiometer.
European and other nations plan to complete the constellation by launching
various radiometer-equipped satellites.
NASA and JAXA originally planned to launch the core
satellite in 2007. But GPM was dealt a setback in 2001 when U.S. President
George W. Bush directed NASA to delay the start of any new Earth science
missions pending the outcome of a government-wide review he ordered of
federally-funded climate change research efforts.
By the time that review wrapped up in 2003, GPM had
fallen behind schedule. The following year, in the wake of Bush's unveiling of a
new vision for space exploration, NASA delayed GPM an additional two years to
2012.
This year's budget request, due to be released Feb.
7, could hold better news for GPM. Ghassem Asrar, NASA's deputy associate
administrator for science, said the agency wants to launch the core GPM
satellite by the end of the decade and believes it can accomplish this
affordably by buying the satellite from the agency's Rapid Spacecraft
Acquisition catalog of flight-proven satellite platforms.
"We have set a goal for ourselves to launch the
mission by the end of the decade, around 2010. That would be roughly two years
earlier than what was put into the budget last year," Asrar said in an
interview. "As part of achieving this goal, we are looking at all ways of
getting the mission done. One is to buy the spacecraft through the
catalog."
NASA has been looking at satellite designs from the
three American vendors included in the spacecraft catalog: Ball Aerospace,
Orbital Sciences Corp., and General Dynamics C4 Systems (which acquired small
satellite builder Spectrum Astro in July 2004).
Asrar said NASA is confident it can find a spacecraft
in the catalog that meets its requirements and expects to select a vendor by
this summer. Industry officials said they expect NASA to narrow the field from
three vendors down to two in the weeks ahead.
If NASA goes with one of the spacecraft designs in
the catalogue, it would scrap plans to have the Goddard Space Flight Center in
Greenbelt, Md. build the satellite in house.
Goddard has been designing a satellite made almost
entirely of lightweight composite materials. Although there are satellites in
orbit today with composite components, Asrar said GPM would have been NASA's
first fully composite spacecraft.
NASA and JAXA plan to launch GPM along with another
satellite on a Japanese H-2A rocket. Although any comparable satellite bought
through the Rapid catalog would be heavier than one made almost entirely of
composite materials, Asrar said all of the satellites NASA is considering for
the mission could still be dual manifested on an H-2A without giving up any
capability.
NASA and JAXA are expected to finalize GPM's target
launch date by year's end. Before then, NASA plans to select a company by the
end of February to build the satellite's microwave radiometer and choose one of
the spacecraft designs from the Rapid catalog.
"Once the spacecraft and instrument are selected, we
will be in a dialogue with Japan to finalize the launch manifest," Asrar said.
"We are hoping by fall this year to nail down the launch
year."