Workers at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station prepare to erect the first stage of an Atlas II/Centaur rocket in the launch gantry on pad 36A. Atlas II is designed to launch payloads into low earth orbit, geosynchronous transfer orbit or geosynchronous orbit. The rocket is the launch vehicle for the NASA/Lockheed Martin GOES-L satellite, part of the NOAA National Weather Service system in weather imagery and atmospheric sounding information. The primary objective of the GOES-L is to provide a full capability satellite in an on-orbit storage condition, to assure NOAA continuity in services from a two-satellite constellation. Launch services are being provided by the 45th Space Wing KSC00pp0412
Summary
Workers at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station prepare to erect the first stage of an Atlas II/Centaur rocket in the launch gantry on pad 36A. Atlas II is designed to launch payloads into low earth orbit, geosynchronous transfer orbit or geosynchronous orbit. The rocket is the launch vehicle for the NASA/Lockheed Martin GOES-L satellite, part of the NOAA National Weather Service system in weather imagery and atmospheric sounding information. The primary objective of the GOES-L is to provide a full capability satellite in an on-orbit storage condition, to assure NOAA continuity in services from a two-satellite constellation. Launch services are being provided by the 45th Space Wing
Nothing Found.
Tags
kennedy space center
workers
station
cape canaveral air force station
stage
first stage
atlas
centaur
rocket
gantry
launch gantry
atlas ii
payloads
earth
orbit
earth orbit
geosynchronous
transfer
geosynchronous transfer orbit
geosynchronous orbit
vehicle
launch vehicle
martin
goes l
satellite
martin goes l satellite
noaa
national
system
noaa national weather service system
imagery
weather imagery
objective
capability
capability satellite
on orbit
storage
on orbit storage condition
continuity
noaa continuity
services
two satellite
constellation
two satellite constellation
launch services
space
air force
cape canaveral
launch pad
rocket engines
rocket technology
constellation march
nasa
Date
27/03/2000
Location
Cape Canaveral, FL
Source
NASA
Link
Copyright info
Public Domain Dedication (CC0)