A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket stands
poised for launch Sunday from the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station to
boost 11 Orbcomm data relay satellites into orbit.
Orbcomm
In another
first, the Falcon 9 will use colder, denser-than-usual liquid oxygen and
kerosene propellants, a significant upgrade allowing the booster's nine
Merlin 1D first-stage engines to generate more power, increasing their
combined liftoff thrust from 1.3 million pounds to 1.5 million, or
170,000 pounds of thrust per engine.
The new system, including
extensive launch pad modifications, was put to the test last week when
the rocket was erected at the pad and fueled for an engine test firing.
Engineers ran into a variety of glitches that ultimately delayed the
"static" firing for two days. But on Friday, the work paid off and the
engines were briefly ignited to verify good performance.
Now, with
forecasters predicting a 90 percent chance of favorable weather,
liftoff from launch complex 40 at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station
is targeted for 8:29 p.m. EST (GMT-5) Sunday.
"Currently looking
good for a Sunday night ... attempted orbital launch and rocket landing
at Cape Canaveral," SpaceX founder and chief designer Elon Musk tweeted
after the successful engine test firing.
Increasing the Falcon 9's
thrust will allow SpaceX to launch heavier payloads, a key issue in the
commercial satellite industry. Perhaps more important over the long
haul, Musk believes the only way to dramatically lower launch costs is
to recover, refurbish and reuse spent rocket stages.
A
computer graphic showing a SpaceX Falcon 9 first stage attempting a
powered landing. The company plans to attempt a landing at the Cape
Canaveral Air Force Station after launch Sunday evening.
SpaceX
Amazon-founder
Jeff Bezos agrees, and his New Shepard sub-orbital rocket, intended to
boost passengers to the edge of space, recently carried out a successful landing in Texas after an unpiloted test flight.
But sub-orbital rockets experience far less stress and much lower
velocities than boosters taking off on flights to orbit, and getting a
Falcon 9 stage safely back to Earth is a daunting technological
challenge.Before Sunday's flight, SpaceX had carried out two
attempts to land a Falcon 9 first stage on an off-shore barge,
demonstrating the booster's ability to autonomously slow down, re-enter
the atmosphere and descend to a powered, tail-first landing.
In
the first attempt, a hydraulic system failure resulted in a crash
landing on the barge. In the second, the booster managed to set down on
the barge but tipped over and exploded.
In both cases, the
rocket's control software worked properly and left little doubt SpaceX
could get a Falcon 9 first stage back to a landing target. But the Air
Force, which manages the Florida launch site, had to be convinced a
returning booster posed no credible threat to life or property.
Like
all rockets launched from the East Coast, the Falcon 9 was equipped
with a self-destruct system under the control of Air Force range safety
officers.
While no details have been provided, SpaceX was cleared
to attempt a touchdown Sunday at "Landing Site 1," an abandoned Atlas
ICBM launch complex the company leases at the Cape Canaveral Air Force
Station. Area residents were warned they might hear a sonic boom during
the booster's approach.
Playing it safe, the Air Force was
expected to enforce a large buffer zone, clearing personnel from the
immediate area in case the returning rocket somehow went awry. News
media, which typically cover SpaceX launchings from a causeway about
three miles from the pad, were relocated to Port Canaveral some 14 miles
from the launch site and about eight miles from the landing zone.
But
the landing attempt, however important to SpaceX's long-range plans,
was a purely secondary objective for Sunday's launch. The primary goals
of the flight were to test the new rocket and to deploy 11 small Orbcomm
satellites, each weighing about 380 pounds, into a 400-mile-high orbit.
The satellites are part of a growing constellation of Orbcomm
spacecraft that provides data relay services.
The company launched
six satellites on a previous SpaceX mission, although one failed after
reaching orbit. Overall, Orbcomm operates a constellation of 34
spacecraft.
Orbcomm CEO Marc Eisenberg told Spaceflight Now that
his company has enjoyed a good relationship with SpaceX and that he had
no qualms being the first customer on the upgraded Falcon 9.
"This
is certainly an upgraded rocket," he said. "There's also, if you look
at the margins and everything, there's a little bit more redundancy in
this rocket as well. I'm feeling pretty good about that.
Return-to-flight missions also typically have better success rates than
standard missions, but you're also aware that you need your backup plans
just in case, and there's a reason to buy insurance."
The
upgraded Falcon 9 is five feet taller than the previous version -- 229
feet -- and features an extended "interstage" section separating the
first and second stages, along with an improved stage separation system.
The second stage propellant tanks were extended and its single Merlin
1D engine features a longer nozzle and can generate 210,000 pounds of
thrust in vacuum.
All 10 engines burn refined kerosene fuel, known
as RP-1, and liquid oxygen. Liquid oxygen has a temperature of around
minus 298 degrees Fahrenheit, but during tests last week Musk tweeted
the oxygen on board the upgraded rocket is cooled to minus 340 degrees.
The RP-1, which normally is stored at a room temperature 70 degrees, is
chilled to 20 degrees.
A
SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket breaks apart during launch June 28 when its
second stage liquid oxygen tank ruptured due to a strut failure.
NASA TV
"One
of the things we're doing for the first time, the first time I think
anyone's done it, is deeply cryogenic propellant," Musk said last week
at the fall meeting of the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco.
"We're sub-cooling the propellant, particularly the liquid oxygen, close
to its freezing point, which increases the density quite significantly."The
thrust is higher, we've improved the stage separation system, we
stretched the upper stage of the rocket to add more propellant to that.
There are a number of other improvements in electronics. It's a
significantly improved rocket from the last one."
The launching was a critical milestone for SpaceX.
Along
with clearing the way for two more launches in January, a successful
flight Sunday also was expected to help pave the way for SpaceX to
resume space station cargo delivery flights in early February under a
$1.6 billion contract with NASA to deliver some 44,000 pounds of cargo
and supplies over 12 flights.
The company's seventh operational
resupply mission ended in a spectacular failure June 28 when a defective
strut inside a Falcon 9's second stage liquid oxygen tank broke away,
releasing a high-pressure helium tank and triggering a catastrophic
in-flight breakup.
After a lengthy failure investigation, SpaceX
took action to make sure no defective struts could find their way into
downstream rockets. At the same time, engineers pressed ahead with the
modifications allowing the rocket to generate additional launch power
through the use of densified liquid oxygen.
Given the failure in
June, NASA managers told Musk the agency did not want to resume SpaceX
resupply flights until after the upgraded rocket had flown at least
once. Along with the Orbcomm launch Sunday, SpaceX plans to launch an
SES communications satellite sometime in January, along with a NASA
ocean research satellite on Jan. 17.
The SES launch will use the upgraded Falcon 9 while the NASA research satellite uses the earlier version.
Assuming those flights go well, NASA is targeting Feb. 7 for the next SpaceX station resupply flight.
SpaceX
is one of two companies with NASA resupply contracts. Orbital ATK holds
a $1.9 billion contract with NASA to deliver some 20 tons of supplies
and equipment. Like SpaceX, Orbital suffered a catastrophic launch
failure Oct. 28, 2014, when a company-designed Antares rocket exploded
seconds after liftoff.
The disaster grounded Orbital for a full
year, but the company returned to flight Dec. 3 using a United Launch
Alliance Atlas 5 rocket to boost a Cygnus cargo ship to the space
station. Another Atlas 5/Cygnus launch is planned for March 10,
following by the first flight of a redesigned Antares at the end of May.
While
Orbital hopes to sell its Antares for commercial flights down the road,
NASA is the rocket's only current customer. SpaceX is relying on its
upgraded Falcon 9 to carry a full manifest of NASA, military and
civilian satellites into orbit.
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