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Lessons Learned – Satellite Deployments

contributor authorNASA - National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
date accessioned2017-09-04T18:21:02Z
date available2017-09-04T18:21:02Z
date copyright08/01/2000
date issued2000
identifier otherHXTEQCAAAAAAAAAA.pdf
identifier urihttp://yse.yabesh.ir/std;jsery=autho162s7D8308/handle/yse/203505
description abstractDescription of Driving Event:
During the launch of the NOAA-K weather satellite there was an anomalous deployment of the Very High Frequency Real Time Antenna (VRA) and an incomplete deployment of the -Y Deployable Sunshade.
The VRA is a two-stage deployment. Phase 1 deploys 76 degrees followed by the Phase 2, which deploys through an angle of 166 degrees. The Phase 1 slowly deployed to only approximately 58 degrees instead of its planned 76 degrees. The Phase 2 deployed its full 166 degrees. This left the VRA mispointed by approximately 18 degrees. However, this mispointing does not affect data recovery via the VRA.
The telemetry indicated the -Y sunshade had not fully deployed. The incomplete sunshade deployment could not by correlated to other indirect observables, since the -Y deployable sunshade is not required for thermal control in the AM orbit.
languageEnglish
titleNASA-LLIS-0909num
titleLessons Learned – Satellite Deploymentsen
typestandard
page3
statusActive
treeNASA - National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA):;2000
contenttypefulltext
subject keywordsFlight Equipment
subject keywordsHardware
subject keywordsSpacecraft
subject keywordsTest & Verification


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