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Deep
Impact Mission Status
03/25/05
The Deep Impact spacecraft has completed the commissioning
phase of the mission and has moved into the cruise phase.
Deep Impact mission planners have separated the
spacecraft's flight operations into five mission phases. Cruise
phase will continue until about 60 days before the encounter with
comet Tempel 1 on July 4, 2005.
Soon after launch on Jan. 12, 2005, Deep Impact entered
the commissioning phase. During that phase, the mission team verified
the basic state of health of all subsystems and tested the operation
of science instruments. The spacecraft's autonomous navigation system
was activated and tested using the Moon and Jupiter as targets.
The spacecraft's high gain antenna, which will relay
images and data of the cometary collision, was activated and is
operating properly. A trajectory correction maneuver was performed,
refining the spacecraft's flight path to comet Tempel 1. The maneuver
was so successful that a second one planned for March 31 has been
cancelled.
Another event during commissioning phase was the
bake-out heating of the spacecraft's High Resolution Instrument
to remove normal residual moisture from its barrel. The moisture
was a result of absorption into the structure of the instrument
during the vehicle's last hours on the launch pad and its transit
through the atmosphere to space.
At completion of the bake-out procedure, test images
were taken through the High Resolution Instrument. These images
indicate the telescope has not reached perfect focus. A special
team has been formed to investigate the performance and to evaluate
activities to bring the telescope the rest of the way to focus.
Future calibration tests will provide additional information about
the instrument's performance.
The Deep Impact spacecraft has four data collectors
to observe the effects of the cometary collision: a camera and infrared
spectrometer comprise the High Resolution Instrument; a Medium Resolution
Instrument; and a duplicate camera on the Impactor Targeting Sensor.
They will record the vehicle's final moments before it is run over
by comet Tempel 1 at approximately 37,000 kilometers per hour (23,000
miles per hour). The Medium Resolution Instrument and Impactor Targeting
Sensor are performing as expected.
Dr. Michael A'Hearn of the University of Maryland,
College Park, MD, said, "We are very early in the process of
examining the data from all the instruments. It appears our infrared
spectrometer is performing spectacularly, and even if the spatial
resolution of the High Resolution Instrument remains at present
levels, we still expect to obtain the best, most detailed pictures
of a comet ever taken."
"This in no way will affect our ability to impact the comet on July 4," said
Rick Grammier, Deep Impact project manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory,
Pasadena, CA. "Everyone on the science and engineering teams is getting
very excited and looking forward to the encounter.
Go to 2005 News Articles Archive
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