NASA - National Aeronautics and Space Administration Science@NASA Web Site
Follow this link to skip to the main content
+ NASA Home
+ Search NASA Web
+ Pagina en Español
+ Contact NASA



Go
HOME SATELLITE TRACKING ABOUT MAILING LISTS STORY ARCHIVES OTHER LANGUAGES
FEATURE

Orbital Express Launches Successfully

03.09.2007

+ Play Audio | + Download Audio | + Email to a friend | + Join mailing list

March 9, 2007: Last night an Atlas V rocket carrying the Orbital Express satellite servicing demonstrator thundered away from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, soaring to low Earth orbit to begin an intensive, three-month demonstration of automated rendezvous and docking capabilities.

If the mission is successful, NASA engineers say, those capabilities could become a critical element of America's future space endeavors, providing an alternative to some human-piloted missions in the next decade. (For more information on this, see Science@NASA's "Look Ma! No Human Hands!")

"It was a picture-perfect launch," says James Lee of the Marshall Space Flight Center. "We're excited and proud to see Orbital Express reach orbit."

see caption

Above: An Atlas V rocket blasts off from Cape Canaveral on March 8 carrying Orbital Express. Photo credit: United Launch Alliance.

Orbital Express is actually two satellites: the Autonomous Space Transport Robotic Operations (ASTRO) service vehicle, and the Next-generation serviceable Satellite (NextSat). The pair will circle Earth in tandem, docking and undocking as they practice on-orbit refueling and satellite repair techniques. They'll also trade and install a functional battery and computer – the first unassisted component exchange in space history.

Key to these maneuvers is a compact state-of-the-art automated guidance system known as AVGS (Advanced Video Guidance Sensor) developed at the Marshall Space Flight Center. Lee is the AVGS project manager, and he's looking forward to the intense field-test his system is about to receive:

"We hope to demonstrate the critical role that these automated rendezvous and docking capabilities are sure to play in America's next-generation space infrastructure."

SEND THIS STORY TO A FRIEND

DARPA, the central research and development organization for the U.S. Department of Defense, manages the Orbital Express Program. The Boeing Company of Huntington Beach, Calif., is DARPA's prime contractor for Orbital Express. The Marshall Center developed the AVGS technology, delivered the flight software and conducted performance tests for Orbital Express. The AVGS system hardware was built by Orbital Sciences Corp. of Dulles, Va.

Author: Rick Smith | Editor: Dr. Tony Phillips | Credit: Science@NASA

More to the story...

Automated Rendezvous and Docking (AR&D) at the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center

Look Ma! No (Human) Hands! -- (Science@NASA)

Orbital Express Space Operations Architecture -- an overview from DARPA.

The Flight Robotics Laboratory (FRL) at the Marshall Space Flight Center provides an on-the-ground test environment for missions like Orbital Express before they launch.

Orbital Express To Test Full Autonomy for On-Orbit Service -- (Aviation Week)

NASA's Future: The Vision for Space Exploration



USAGov

NASA
Curator: Bryan Walls
NASA Official: John M. Horack
Last Updated: June 9, 2005
+ Contact NASA
NASA - National Aeronautics and Spac