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U.S. and China Launch Resupply Ships, NOAA Weather Satellite Orbited & NASA Tests Innovative Heat Shield

A ULA Atlas V rocket carrying the JPSS-2 mission for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and NASA’s Low-Earth Orbit Flight Test of an Inflatable Decelerator (LOFTID) lifts off from Space Launch Complex-3 at 1:49 a.m. PST on November 10. (Credit: ULA)

The United States and China launched supply ship to their respective space stations last week as NASA delayed the launch of the Artemis mission until Nov. 16 due to a hurricane. United Launch Alliance (ULA) launched the newest U.S. weather satellite and an innovative NASA heat shield that could be used to land astronauts and payloads on Mars.

There were five launches last week, raising the global total to 158 for 2022. Six launches are planned for the week ahead.

Orbital Launches
Nov. 7 – 13 2022

Date Launcher – Organization Payload – Organization Purpose Launch Site
Nov. 7 Antares – Northrop Grumman Cygnus – Northrop Grumman ISS resupply, rideshare Wallops
Nov. 10 Atlas V – United Launch Alliance JPSS-2, LOFTID – NOAA, NASA Meteorology, technology demonstration Vandenberg
Nov. 11 Long March 6A – CASC* Yunhai-3 – SAST^ Atmospheric, environmental research Taiyuan
Nov. 12 Long March 7 – CASC* Tianzhou-5 – CMSA+ Station resupply, rideshare Wenchang
Nov. 12 Falcon 9 – SpaceX Galaxy 31, 32 – Intelsat GEO comsats Cape Canaveral
* China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp.
^ Shanghai Academy of Space Technology
+ China Manned Space Agency
Source: Wikipedia

Space Station Launches

Northrop Grumman launched its second Cygnus resupply ship to the International Space Station (ISS) this year on Nov. 7. The spacecraft was able to reach ISS despite one of its two circular solar panels failing to deploy. Northrop Grumman said that debris from an insulation blanket on the Antares rocket prevented the panel from opening.

Cygnus Secondary Payloads

Payload Organization Purpose
PearlAfricaSat-1 Uganda Earth observation
SeaLion Old Dominion University – U.S. Coast Guard Academy Communications
TAKA Kyushu Institute of Technology Earth observation
UtProSat-1 Virginia Tech Communications
ZIMSAT-1 Zimbabwe Earth observation

Cygnus carried five secondary payloads into orbit. SeaLion and UtProSat-1 were deployed from the Antares rocket into very low Earth orbits. The other three satellites will be deployed from the space station.

China launched the Tianzhou-5 cargo ship to the Tiangong space station on Nov. 12. The mission will carry at least six satellites for deployment into low Earth orbit.

Tianzhou-5 Secondary Payloads

Payload Organization Purpose
CAS-10 (XW-4) CAMSAT Amateur radio
Macao Science 1 Macau University of Science and Technology South Atlantic Anomaly observation
Zhixing-3A Beijing Smart Satellite Technology Earth observation
Lianli Dalian University of Technology TBA
Shengxi Jishu Yanzheng TBA Technology demonstration
Gaoxin-1 TBA TBA
Source: Wikipedia

NOAA’s New Weather Satellite

An United Launch Alliance Atlas V launched America’s newest weather satellite, NOAA’s Joint Polar Satellite System-2 (JPSS-2), from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California at 1:32 a.m. PST on Thursday. After hours of difficulty in deploying the spacecraft’s solar array, NASA reported that the array was fully extended and JPSS-2 is performing normally. Details of the delay were not disclosed.

JPSS-2 satellite (Credit: NOAA)

JPSS-2 is the third in a series of five advanced polar-orbiting satellites that circle the Earth 14 times per day to provide a continuous stream of weather data. NASA managed the development and launch of JPSS-2 for NOAA, which operates the spacecraft.

 “The need for advanced satellites, such as JPSS-2, to accurately predict weather and climate has never been greater,” said Michael C. Morgan, Ph.D., assistant secretary of commerce for environmental observation and prediction. “With the steady rise in the number of billion dollar disasters, NOAA remains committed to putting the best technology in space that leads to more reliable, timely forecasts.”

Northrop Grumman Vice President Steve Krein said JPSS-2 will allow “any ground system around the world to receive data in real time, allowing NOAA to receive global data and distribute it to activate emergency preparedness and protect lives.”

LOFTID separates from its Centaur booster. (Credit: NASA)

Inflatable Heat Shield Tested

NASA’s inflatable heat shield, the Low-Earth Orbit Flight Test of an Inflatable Decelerator (LOFTID) , was launched as a secondary payload on the JPSS-2 launch. LOFTID inflated before separating from the Atlas V’s Centaur upper stage and reentering the atmosphere over the Pacific Ocean. The test vehicle ejected a backup data recorder module before it splashed down under a parachute. The test vehicle and the backup module were recovered from the ocean. The backup module was there in case LOFTID and the primary data recorder were lost at sea.

The cone-shaped LOFTID is 6 meters (19.7 ft) in diameter, making it the largest blunt body aeroshell to ever reenter from space. Traditional ablative heat shields used in previous missions have been smaller, limiting the size of spacecraft that can enter planets and moons with atmospheres.

LOFTID on the recovery ship after landing in the Pacific Ocean. (Credit: NASA)

LOFTID is composed of a stack of pressurized concentric rings known as tori composed of braided synthetic fibers that are 10 times stronger than steel by weight. The reentry system is equipped with a flexible thermal protection system that insulate the rings from heat in excess of 1,600 C (2,900 F). The foldable, scalable heat shield takes up less room in a launch vehicle.

Other Launches

SpaceX launched the Galaxy 31 and 32 geosynchronous communications satellites for Intelsat from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. It was SpaceX’s 52nd launch of 2022.

Earlier in the day, China launched the Yunhai-3 satellite into sun-synchronous orbit aboard a Long March 6A rocket from the Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center. The spacecraft will conduct atmospheric and environmental research.

Launches to Date

The United States continues to lead with 77 launch attempts. China is in second place with 51, with Russia a distant third with 20. The three nations have conducted 93.7 percent of orbital launches this year.

Orbital Launches
Through Nov. 13, 2022

Nation Successes Failures Partial Failures Total Percentage of Total
United States 74 2 1 77 48.7
China 50 1 0 51 32.3
Russia 20 0 0 20 12.7
India 3 1 0 4 2.5
Europe 3 0 0 3 1.9
Iran 1 0 0 1 0.6
South Korea 1 0 0 1 0.6
Japan 0 1 0 1 0.6
Total 152 5 1 158 100

Russia’s launch total was reduced due to the nation’s invasion of Ukraine in February. The war resulted in the cancellation of six launches booked by OneWeb and one by the European Space Agency.

Europe and Japan are dealing with the delayed introduction of new boosters. The first flight of Europe’s Ariane 6 has been delayed to the fourth quarter of next year. Japan’s new H3 rocket will also make its maiden flight in 2023.

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