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LISA Pathfinder launch timeline
by Staff Writers
Kourou, French Guiana (ESA) Dec 03, 2015


As Europe's centre of excellence for mission operations, the European Space Operations Centre (ESOC) is home to the engineers who control spacecraft in orbit, manage our global tracking station network, and design and build the systems on ground that support missions in space. Since 1967, over 60 satellites belonging to ESA and its partners have been flown from Darmstadt, Germany. Image courtesy ESA/J.Mai - CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO. For a larger version of this image please go here.

On Thursday, a Vega rocket will boost LISA Pathfinder into space to pave the way to a future mission for detecting gravitational waves. Once aloft, ESA's mission control teams will pace the ultra high-tech spacecraft through the critical first days of the journey to its final destination.

At 04:04 GMT (05:04 CET) on Thursday, 3 December, ESA's LISA Pathfinder is set to lift off on a 30 m-tall Vega rocket from Europe's Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana, for a 105-minute ride into orbit.

Liftoff was previously planned for 2 December, but was delayed by one day to thoroughly check a technical issue with the launcher.

LISA Pathfinder is a demonstrator to help open up a completely new window into the Universe: it will test new technologies needed to measure gravitational waves in space. Predicted by Albert Einstein, these waves are ripples in the curvature of spacetime produced by massive celestial events, such as the merging of black holes.

Detecting gravitational waves would be an additional confirmation of General Relativity, and greatly improve our knowledge of the most powerful phenomena in the Universe.

Separation from Vega is expected at 05:49 GMT (06:49 CET), marking the moment when controllers at ESA's ESOC operations centre in Darmstadt, Germany, take over the satellite.

First contact is expected two minutes later, around 05:51 GMT (06:51 CET) via the ground station at Kourou.

After confirming LISA Pathfinder's status and overall health, ground teams will start an intensive cycle of crucial and complex orbit-raising manoeuvres.

These will include firing the mission's propulsion module six times during mid-December to raise its initial orbit, before beginning a six-week cruise phase to its operational orbit some 1.5 million km from Earth in a sunward direction.

After arriving at the final working orbit, the propulsion module will be discarded in later January, and, after about three months of setting-up and calibration, the science mission will begin in March.


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Related Links
LISA Pathfinder operations
The Physics of Time and Space






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Previous Report
PHYSICS NEWS
LISA Pathfinder - the countdown is running
Hannover, Germany (SPX) Dec 01, 2015
At 5:15 CET on December 2, a Vega rocket is scheduled for launch from the European spaceport in Kourou (French Guiana) to lift a "pathfinder" into space: LISA Pathfinder will demonstrate novel technologies for the planned gravitational-wave observatory eLISA that will one day capture the sound of the Universe. The LISA Pathfinder project is based on more than ten years of scientific development ... read more


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