[sci.space.shuttle] Shuttle Mission STS-30 Details

kd2bd@ka2qhd.UUCP (John Magliacane Wall Township NJ) (04/22/89)

The U.S. Space Shuttle ATLANTIS is scheduled for launch on mission STS-30 on
April 28th at 2:24 PM EDT (1824 UTC). The countdown is scheduled to begin at
8:00 AM (1200 UTC) on Tuesday, April 25th. The lauch window will be 22 minutes
in length.

The primary payload of mission STS-30 will be the deployment of the Magellan
Venus space probe.

* LAUNCH WINDOWS *
------------------
Here are some launch windows assigned for mission STS-30. All times and dates
are expressed in UTC:

Date    From     To
------+-------+------
28Apr : 18:24 : 18:42
29Apr : 18:18 : 18:43
30Apr : 18:13 : 18:44
01May : 18:07 : 18:45
02May : 18:01 : 18:45
03May : 17:54 : 18:46
04May : 17:48 : 18:47

* VENUS FACTS *
---------------
Radius:  3,630 miles
Rotational Period:  243 Earth days
Orbit Period:  225 Earth days
Distance from Sun:  64,920,000 miles
Density:  5.2 times that of water
Surface Gravity:  0.907 times that of Earth's gravity
Atmospheric Pressure at Surface:  90 times that of Earth's surface pressure
Surface Temperature:  850 degrees Fahrenheit
Atmospheric Composition:  Carbon dioxide (96%); nitrogen (3+%); trace amounts
                          of surface dioxide, water vapor, carbon monoxide,
                          argon, helium, neon, htdrogen chloride and hydrogen
                          fluoride

* MAGELLAN MISSION HIGHLIGHTS *
-------------------------------
Interplanetary Cruise:  442 to 468 days
Planned Trajectory Correction Maneuvers:  15 days after deployment from
                                          Shuttle; 360 days after deployment
                                          from Shuttle; and 17 days before
                                          Venus orbit insertion
Orbit Insertion:  August 10, 1990, 1700 UTC, STAR 48 solid rocket motor fires
                  to put spacecraft in orbit around Venus
Mapping Orbit Period:  3.15 hours
Radar Mapping:  37 minutes per orbit
Mapping Orbit Inclination:  86 degrees
Superior Conjuction:  October 26 to November 9, 1990
End of Nominal Mission:  April 28, 1991
Data Gap Recoverable:  June 27 to July 10, 1991


TRAJECTORY SEQUENCE OF EVENTS:
__________________________________________________________________
                                          RELATIVE
EVENT                            MET      VELOCITY  MACH  ALTITUDE
                              (d:h:m:s)     (fps)           (ft)
__________________________________________________________________

Launch                        0/00:00:00
Begin Roll Maneuver           0/00:00:09      183    .16      774
End Roll Maneuver             0/00:00:17      365    .32    2,825
SSME Throttle Down to 65%     0/00:00:30      711    .64    9,043
Max. Dyn. Pressure (Max Q)    0/00:00:59    1,368   1.35   35,133
SSME Throttle Up to 104%      0/00:01:02    1,428   1.43   37,284
SRB Staging                   0/00:02:05    4,212   3.93  153,405
Negative Return               0/00:03:58    6,915   7.39  319,008
Main Engine Cutoff (MECO)     0/00:08:31   24,286  22.70  362,243
Zero Thrust                   0/00:08:38
ET Separation                 0/00:08:45
OMS 1 Burn                    0/00:10:31
OMS 2 Burn                    0/00:44:27
Magellan/IUS Deploy (orbit 5) 0/06:18:00
Deorbit Burn (orbit 64)       3/23:53:00
Landing (orbit 65)            4/00:53:00

Apogee, Perigee at MECO:        85 x 3   nm
Apogee, Perigee post-OMS 1:    160 x 51  nm
Apogee, Perigee post-OMS 2:    160 x 160 nm
Apogee, Perigee post-deploy:   176 x 161 nm


73, John  KD2BD @ NN2Z

<eof>


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