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| Photo by United Launch Alliance - Carleton Bailie |
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DSP-23
Mission Booklet
DSP-23
launch highlights
Cape Canaveral, Fla., (Nov. 11, 2007) – United
Launch Alliance successfully launched the first operational
Delta IV Heavy expendable launch vehicle for the U.S. Air
Force from Space Launch Complex-37 Nov. 10, 8:50 p.m., EST,
carrying the service’s Defense Support Program-23 satellite.
A Delta IV Heavy demonstration flight was launched from SLC-37
in December 2004. The launch also marks the fourth ULA mission
conducted for the Air Force this year and the 10th ULA mission
in 2007.
Weighing 5,200 pounds, the DSP-23 satellite completed a
6 hour, 20 minute mission and was deployed into its proper
orbit at 3:10 a.m., today. The DSP-23 launch completes the
deployment of this important constellation of satellites.
DSP satellites provide early warning for intercontinental
ballistic missile launches and have been used by the military
for more than 30 years.
"Following the Delta IV Heavy test flight three years ago,
the hard work and dedication of the team to prepare to launch
our first operational mission was phenomenal," said Mark
Wilkins, ULA vice president, Delta Programs. "We appreciate
the support from our Air Force customer in achieving this
milestone, and ULA is pleased to welcome the Delta IV Heavy
as a member of our operational vehicle family."
DSP satellites use infrared sensors to detect heat from
missile and booster plumes against the Earth’s background.
Operated from the Space Based Infrared Systems Mission Control
Station at Buckley Air Force Base, Colo., DSP satellites
provide accurate and reliable launch detection data to the
warfighter.
The ULA Delta IV Heavy vehicle featured a common booster
core with two, strap-on common booster cores. Each common
booster core was powered by the Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne
RS-68 cryogenic engine. An RL10B-2 cryogenic engine, upgraded
from the RL10 engine that has been in use for more than four
decades, powered the second stage. The payload was encased
by a 5-meter diameter (16.7-foot diameter) aluminum, tri-sector
payload fairing.
ULA constructed the Delta IV launch vehicle in Decatur,
Ala. By May 2003, all three common booster cores arrived
at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station from Decatur. The vehicle
was moved from the Horizontal Integration Facility and erected
on the stand at Pad 37 using the fixed pad erector for this
launch June 19. Hundreds of ULA technicians, engineers and
management worked to prepare the vehicle for the DSP-23 mission.
ULA's next launch, currently scheduled for no earlier than
Dec. 5, is the commercial COSMO-2 launch aboard a Delta II
from Space Launch Complex 2 at Vandenberg Air Force Base,
Calif.
ULA program management, engineering, test and mission support
functions are headquartered in Denver, Colo. Manufacturing,
assembly and integration operations are located at Decatur,
Ala., Harlingen, Tex. and San Diego, Calif. Launch operations
are located at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla., and
Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif.
For more information on the ULA joint venture call the ULA
Launch Hotline at 1-877-ULA-4321 (852-4321).
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