KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. -- The Mobile Service Tower (left) begins rolling back from the Atlas II rocket with the GOES-M satellite on Launch Complex 36-A, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. GOES-M is the last in the current series of advanced geostationary weather satellites in service. GOES-M has a new instrument not on earlier spacecraft, a Solar X-ray Imager, which can be used in forecasting space weather and the effects of solar storms. The satellite is scheduled to launch atop an Atlas rocket on July 23 during a window that extends from 3:02 to 4:26 a.m. EDT. EDT KSC-01pp1368
Summary
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, Fla. -- The Mobile Service Tower (left) begins rolling back from the Atlas II rocket with the GOES-M satellite on Launch Complex 36-A, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. GOES-M is the last in the current series of advanced geostationary weather satellites in service. GOES-M has a new instrument not on earlier spacecraft, a Solar X-ray Imager, which can be used in forecasting space weather and the effects of solar storms. The satellite is scheduled to launch atop an Atlas rocket on July 23 during a window that extends from 3:02 to 4:26 a.m. EDT. EDT
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Tags
kennedy space center
mobile
tower
mobile service tower
atlas
rocket
atlas ii rocket
goes m
satellite
goes m satellite
launch
launch complex
station
cape canaveral air force station
geostationary
geostationary weather satellites
instrument
spacecraft
solar
x ray
imager
solar x ray imager
space weather
storms
atlas rocket
edt ksc
air force
cape canaveral
rocket engines
rocket technology
rocket launch
space launch complex
nasa
Date
22/07/2001
Location
Source
NASA
Link
Copyright info
Public Domain Dedication (CC0)