The
following comments have been extracted form a news article that
appeared on www.space.com
at http://www.space.com/missionlaunches/delta2_launch_030331.html
CAPE
CANAVERAL, Fla. -- Another navigation spacecraft was
successfully launched into Earth orbit Monday riding atop an Air
Force Delta 2 rocket on a $90 million satellite delivery
mission.
Planned to fly long before Operation Iraqi Freedom
materialized, the Navstar Global Positioning System (GPS)
satellite is expected to be operational in less than 30 days.
GPS-2R9, it was launched to replace an early Navstar
model that was sent into space 13 years ago and now is at the
end of its useful lifetime.
"The
launch of 2R9 continues the success story of our replenishment
launches to maintain the GPS constellation for our government
and commercial users," said Col. Allan Ballenger, system
program director at the Space and Missile Systems Center, Los
Angeles AFB, Calif.
The
$2.5 billion constellation of 28 Navstar GPS satellites send out
signals that are received by military and civil users around the
world to provide information on where they are on the planet,
accurate time, what direction they are moving and how fast they
are going.
GPS satellite receivers now can be found on the shelves
of consumer electronics stores; or on the dashboards of civilian
cars, trucks and minivans.
Despite
the war in Iraq and the availability of the free GPS signal to
anyone with a receiver, Air Force officials have said there are
no plans to restrict access to the civil signal.
SPACE
SHOT
Liftoff of the Boeing-built, three-stage Delta 2 rocket from
Cape Canaveral Air Force Station came at 5:09 p.m. EST (2209
GMT), delayed to the end of a 15-minute launch window because of
a last minute technical problem with the Eastern Test Range.
Gusting surface winds were a concern until the blast off
into chilly blue skies as Florida's Space Coast was experiencing
what weather officials called the final wintertime blast of cold
air.
The
workhorse Delta 2 rocket appeared to go through its usual launch
sequence without incident.
First its main engine and six of nine strap-on solid
rocket boosters ignited to send the
13-story rocket skyward. About a minute later the
remaining three boosters fired and the first six dropped away.
After
a minute or so, the three boosters extinguished and were
jettisoned, by which time the Delta 2 was quickly moving
from sight of ground-based eyewitnesses.
One hour and eight minutes after liftoff, the Lockheed
Martin-built GPS spacecraft separated from the Delta 2 upper
stage and the launch phase of the mission was declared a
success.
"It
was a flawless launch," said Will Trafton, vice president
and general manager of Boeing Expendable Launch Systems.
"We've got a great team here at the Cape... and they've
done it once again."
The
launch marked the 49th time a Navstar GPS was sent into orbit
from the Cape -- something that launch site workers are
particularly proud of.
"The control of the battlefield does start
here," said Lt. Col. Brad Broemmel, the 45th Space Wing's
1st Space Launch Squadron commander at the air station.
"GPS is like water. Our combat forces don't go
anywhere without it now, and we'd like to think that the 45th
Space Wing is the tap. We want to keep that tap open, that's
what
assured access to space means," Broemmel said.
LOOK
AHEAD
Another launch like Monday's is targeted for July when the Air
Force is to launch GPS-2R10, Ballenger said.
Then a year later, around July 2004, the Air Force will
begin a series of launches to send eight upgraded GPS spacecraft
into orbit.
These are called the GPS-2RM spacecraft -- with the
"M" standing for modernized.
The newer spacecraft will feature additional military and
civilian signals, as well as increased power for the military
signal.
After
that will be another series of follow-on spacecraft known as the
GPS-2F, Ballenger said, which in turn will pave the way for the
next generation of navigation satellites that will be called
GPS-3.
First launch of those spacecraft is now expected in the
2012 timeframe, but there are
discussions of accelerating that program by possibly a
year or two, Ballenger said.