NASA Lunar Mission Successfully Enters Moon Orbit JUNE 23rd, 2009
Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter
This artist's concept shows LRO in orbit of the moon. Credit: NASA
June 23rd, 2009
NASA Lunar Mission Successfully Enters Moon Orbit GREENBELT, Md. -- After a four and a half day journey from the Earth, the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter, or LRO, has successfully entered orbit around the moon. Engineers at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., confirmed the spacecraft's lunar orbit insertion at 6:27 a.m. EDT Tuesday.
During transit to the moon, engineers performed a mid-course correction to get the spacecraft in the proper position to reach its lunar destination. Since the moon is always moving, the spacecraft shot for a target point ahead of the moon. When close to the moon, LRO used its rocket motor to slow down until the gravity of the moon caught the spacecraft in lunar orbit.
"Lunar orbit insertion is a crucial milestone for the mission," said Cathy Peddie, LRO deputy project manager at Goddard. "The LRO mission cannot begin until the moon captures us. Once we enter the moon's orbit, we can begin to buildup the dataset needed to understand in greater detail the lunar topography, features and resources. We are so proud to be a part of this exciting mission and NASA's planned return to the moon."
A series of four engine burns over the next four days will put the satellite into its commissioning phase orbit. During the commissioning phase each of its seven instruments is checked out and brought online. The commissioning phase will end approximately 60 days after launch, when LRO will use its engines to transition to its primary mission orbit.
For its primary mission, LRO will orbit above the moon at about 31 miles, or 50 kilometers, for one year. The spacecraft's instruments will help scientists compile high resolution, three-dimensional maps of the lunar surface and also survey it at many spectral wavelengths.
The satellite will explore the moon's deepest craters, examining permanently sunlit and shadowed regions, and provide understanding of the effects of lunar radiation on humans. LRO will return more data about the moon than any previous mission.
For more information about the LRO mission, visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/lro
LRO Enters Orbit Around the Moon
The Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter has successfully entered orbit around the moon following a nearly five-day journey. Engineers at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., confirmed the spacecraft's lunar orbit insertion at 6:27 a.m. EDT on June 23.
A series of four engine burns through June 27 will finalize LRO's initial orbit. During this phase, each of its seven instruments is checked out and brought online. LRO Project Manager Craig Tooley reports that LEND and CRaTER are already online and working well.
The LRO satellite will explore the moon's deepest craters, examining permanently sunlit and shadowed regions, and provide understanding of the effects of lunar radiation on humans. LRO will return more data about the moon than any previous mission. The spacecraft's instruments will help scientists compile high resolution, three-dimensional maps of the lunar surface and also survey it at many spectral wavelengths.
3 Comments:
I just wanted you to know how nice it was to stumble onto your site, very late tonight, or Thursday morning. I follow lunar new, fairly closely, on a fellow blogger site, for a small group of lunar enthusiasts:
Lunar Pioneer-Lunar Networks
And this forces me to have to listen to an incredible amount of silly talk about former President Bush that can become too much at times.
That's what I wanted to say, that I appreciated the posting about LRO, this spacecraft, a modest mission, for which I have waited for forty years, would not have happened without the Vision of George W. Bush, following the heartbreaking Columbia accident.
I supported President Bush from 1999, or so, and always though highly of him, and still do, even though I don't think much of his former Secretary of the Treasury, frankly. I still can't figure out what kind of story they had to tell him in order for him to come out into the Rose Garden to call on Congress to pass that TARP bill... but.. I have to listen to so much ignorant talk, these days. It was nice to know there was someone out here who still slept better at night knowing George W. Bush was in the White House.
And, here it is a quarter after 3 in the morning, and what can I say.... I'm obviously not sleeping well, am I?
That was all, thank you, and thanks for supporting long-term vision for our nation over short-term fashion.
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