Antares A-ONE
2013 American test spaceflight
Antares A-ONE mission was the maiden flight of Orbital Sciences Corporation ' Antares launch vehicle including the ascent to space and accurate delivery of a simulated payload, the Cygnus Mass Simulator (CMS), which was launched 21 April 2013.[ 6] It was launched from Pad 0A at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport (MARS), Wallops Flight Facility , Virginia .[ 6] The simulated payload simulates the mass of the Cygnus cargo spacecraft .[ 6] This dummy payload was sent into an orbit of 223 km × 237 km (139 mi × 147 mi) with an orbital inclination of 51.63°, the same launch profile it will use for Orbital's Cygnus cargo supply missions to the International Space Station (ISS) for NASA .
This launch along with several other activities leading up to it, are paid milestones under NASA's Commercial Orbital Transportation Services (COTS) program.[ 7]
Primary payload
The primary payload was the Cygnus Mass Simulator. It had a height of 5.061 m (16.60 ft), a diameter of 2.896 m (9 ft 6.0 in) and a mass of 3,800 kg (8,400 lb).[ 8] It was equipped with 22 accelerometers , 2 microphones , 12 digital thermometers , 24 thermocouples and 12 strain gages .[ 8]
Secondary payloads
Four Spaceflight Industries Inc. CubeSat nanosatellites were deployed from the dummy payload.[ 9]
The secondary payloads were four CubeSats that were deployed from the CMS.[ 8] Three of them were PhoneSats , 1U CubeSats built by NASA's Ames Research Center .[ 8] These were named Alexander , Graham and Bell , after the Alexander Graham Bell , inventor of the telephone .[ 8] The purpose of these three satellites was to demonstrate the use of smartphones as avionics in CubeSats.[ 8] They each had a mass of 1,124 kg (2,478 lb) and were powered by lithium batteries .[ 8] The fourth nanosat was a 3U CubeSat, called Dove-1 , built by Cosmogia Inc. It carried a "technology development Earth imagery experiment" using the Earth's magnetic field for attitude control .[ 8] [ 10]
Mission timeline
Lift off of the Antares launch vehicle occurs two seconds after the first stage engines are ignited
The first stage engines shut off 228 seconds after lift-off
At 233 seconds, the first stage separates from the second
At 317 seconds, the payload fairing is jettisoned
At 326 seconds, the second stage's engine is ignited
At 481 seconds, the second stage is shut off
At 601 seconds, the Cygnus Mass Simulator separates [ 6]
Launch attempt summary
Note: Times are local to the launch site (Eastern Daylight Time ).
Attempt
Planned
Result
Turnaround
Reason
Decision point
Weather go (%)
Notes
1
17 Apr 2013, 5:00:00 pm
Scrubbed
—
Technical
17 Apr 2013, 4:44 pm (T−12:00)
60[ 11]
Premature disconnect of upper stage umbilical cable during T−12:00 hold.[ 12]
2
20 Apr 2013, 6:10:00 pm
Scrubbed
3 days 1 hour 10 minutes
Weather
20 Apr 2013, 4:30 pm
90
[ 13]
3
21 Apr 2013, 5:00:00 pm
Success
0 days 22 hours 50 minutes
80
First flight of Antares.[ 14]
Gallery
See also
References
External links
Launch vehicles Operators Past missions Current missions Future missions
Signs † indicate launch failures.
January February
Intelsat 27
Globalstar M078, M087, M093, M094, M095, M096
Azerspace-1/Africasat-1a , Amazonas 3
Progress M-18M
Landsat 8
SARAL , Sapphire , NEOSSat , UniBRITE-1 , TUGSAT-1 , AAUSat-3 , STRaND-1
March April
Anik G1
Bion-M No.1 (Aist 2, BeeSat-2, BeeSat-3, SOMP, Dove-2 , OSSI-1 )
Cygnus Mass Simulator , Dove 1 , Alexander , Graham , Bell
Progress M-19M
Gaofen 1 , TurkSat-3USat , NEE-01 Pegaso , CubeBug-1
Kosmos 2485
May June July August September October November
Mars Orbiter Mission
Soyuz TMA-11M
Globus-1M No.13L
MAVEN
ORS-3, STPSat-3, Black Knight 1, CAPE-2, ChargerSat-1, COPPER, DragonSat-1, Firefly (satellite), Ho'oponopono-2, Horus, KySat-2, NPS-SCAT, ORSES, ORS Tech 1, 2, PhoneSat 2.4, Prometheus × 8, SENSE A, B, SwampSat, TJ3 Sat , Trailblazer-1, Vermont Lunar CubeSat
Yaogan 19
DubaiSat-2 , STSAT-3, SkySat-1, UniSat-5 (Dove 4, ICube-1 , HumSat-D, PUCP-Sat 1 (Pocket-PUCP), BeakerSat-1, $50SAT , QBScout-1, WREN), AprizeSat 7, 8, Lem , WNISat-1, GOMX-1, CubeBug-2, Delfi-n3Xt , Dove 3, First-MOVE, FUNcube-1 , HINCube-1, KHUSat-1, KHUSat-2, NEE-02 Krysaor , OPTOS , Triton 1, UWE-3, VELOX-P2, ZACUBE-1 , BPA-3
Swarm A, B, C
Shiyan 5
Progress M-21M
December Launches are separated by dots ( • ), payloads by commas ( , ), multiple names for the same satellite by slashes ( / ).Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).