Launch News Radiation Belt Storm (Van Allen) Probes, Atlas V 401, August 30, 2012

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For NASA's unmanned spaceflight missions, the ones that are most famous are the inter-planetary probes. You may have heard about Curiosity, Opportunity, Cassini, Dawn, MESSENGER, MRO, LRO and other missions during the past few weeks.

Yet the missions targeting the most well-studied planet - the Earth - are not that famous. Especially if the mission does not feature a camera or radar.

And one such mission is waiting for launch tomorrow. Featuring two probes flying in tandem on an elliptical orbit, the Radiation Belt Storm Probes will provide unprecedented data on how the Earth's radiation belts work(crucial to our survival from cosmic zaps from the Sun and other bigger things :owned:). The belt's charged particles, plasma waves, and the electric and magnetic fields will be measured from both spacecrafts, allowing different perspectives of the belt from two sources in terms of time and space. It can also provide real-time observations of the changes in the radiation belt during a geo-magnetic (solar) storm.

For details, please read these articles:

NASA: RBSP: Fundamental Physics to Benefit Life on Earth, in Space

NASA: The Electric Atmosphere: Plasma Is Next NASA Science Target

The two probes are identical, weighing at 1475 pounds each (670 kilograms).
Each carries 5 instruments to address the mission's science objectives. These includes:

  • Energetic Particle, Composition, and Thermal Plasma Suite (ECT)
  • Electric and Magnetic Field Instrument Suite and Integrated Science (EMFISIS)
  • Electric Field and Waves Suite (EFW)
  • Radiation Belt Storm Probes Ion Composition Experiment (RBSPICE)
  • Relativistic Proton Spectrometer (RPS)

The launch will use the Atlas V rocket to launch them into an 500 km × 30600 km x 10° orbit. After launch, the two probes will be tested on orbit for two months before putting into service.

The launch is scheduled at 4:07 am EDT (08:07 UTC) tomorrow:

[highlight]Launch of the RBSP mission [eventtimer]2012-8-30 08:05:00?in|was;%c% %d% days, %h% hours, %m% minutes, %ss%[/eventtimer] seconds[eventtimer]2012-8-30 08:05:00?.| ago.;%c%[/eventtimer][/highlight]


You can watch the launch on NASA TV or at the United Launch Alliance site.

Links:

NASA RBSP mission page

John Hopkins University RBSP mission site

RBSP mission press kit

More links, photos and videos related to the mission will be posted later today. In the meantime,

Go Atlas! Go Centaur! Go probes! :hailprobe:
 
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I'm here in Titusville for all launch attempts until Monday or Tuesday!:woohoo:
 
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Hold not being released due to range issue.

Edit:Scrubbed for today!
 
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SCRUB due to range issue. 24-hour recycle.
 
My first in person KSC launch scrub...
 
My first in person KSC launch scrub...

Don't worry, I'm a pro at scrubs!

STS-114, STS-121, STS-122, STS-130, and Falcon 9 COTS2+ all scrubbed on me, with the last one actually having its engine ignite!

There is never anything more disappointing than a scrub, especially at 4AM like this did and STS-130 did in the dead of Winter. At least for you it was warm with a breeze!

Are you going to get to go again tonight?
 
Don't worry, I'm a pro at scrubs!

STS-114, STS-121, STS-122, STS-130, and Falcon 9 COTS2+ all scrubbed on me, with the last one actually having its engine ignite!

There is never anything more disappointing than a scrub, especially at 4AM like this did and STS-130 did in the dead of Winter. At least for you it was warm with a breeze!

Are you going to get to go again tonight?

If they can get the possible C-Band issue sorted.

Fixed it for you. :P

Appreciate it.:lol:
 
Well Codz, the word is GO for tonight. Hope you get lucky, take as many pictures as possible.
 
This is my first post! I am so excited to have found this site. We were looking to see if it was still a go to take the boat out into the Banana River to watch a beautiful night launch. We both grew up here and watching launches are so special. Thank you so much everyone for the information you have provided!
 
If it isn't one thing, it's another...:dry:
 
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