Friday, January 24, 2014

Atlas V Launch, January 23, 2014














One great thing about living in Central Florida - If the skies are clear you can watch the Cape Canaveral launches from your front porch!

The Atlas V went up at around 9:30 last night.
I took the (bad) picture on the right. It looked a lot like a moving bright star at this point.
Moments later the light went out. The flame started again which meant staging had occurred.

Here's some background from the NASA website:
An Atlas V rocket blasted off from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, piercing the clear night sky on a mission to carry a NASA Tracking and Data Relay Satellite into orbit.
The rocket launched at 9:33 p.m. Thursday, carrying not only the TDRS-L satellite, but also special tribute into space honoring longtime NASA engineer Capt. Arthur J. "Skip" Mackey Jr., who died in November.
Mackey was the "Voice of NASA" in the 1960s and '70s, when he broadcast countdowns for the agency's rocket launches from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.
It was Mackey's voice the nation heard when NASA began broadcasting countdowns to the public for the first time. Mackey stayed in that role until retiring after decades of service.
Etched onto the side of the Atlas V was a tribute that read:
In memory of our colleague and friend
Arthur J. "Skip" Mackey Jr.
1933-2013
The NASA and ULA Team
Aside from the etching on the rocket, the launch of a tracking and telemetry satellite is a fitting tribute to Mackey as well. It represents the same type of work "Skip" did with NASA.
The TDRS-L is the second of three next-generation satellites scheduled to launch from Cape Canaveral to replace older satellites already in orbit. It's designed to help improve the space agency's Earth-to-space communications network.

1 comment:

  1. I saw it too (including the staging), here in Mt. Dora-my first launch visual! Pretty impressive, even being 85 miles away!

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