Author
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Topic: First shuttle mission to reach 300 nautical miles
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David C Member Posts: 1015 From: Lausanne Registered: Apr 2012
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posted 02-26-2018 08:03 AM
Throughout the Space Shuttle Program, NASA never really made much of a fuss about the orbiter's "airplane type" records. By that I mean where it pressed on down the X-15's higher and faster trail. I've been pouring through NASA TM-2011-216142 the most recent edition of Robert Legler and Floyd Bennett's "Space Shuttle Missions Summary."I imagine that it will come as no surprise to most people here to know that it contains a few errors and omissions. STS-33, like the rest of the classified DOD missions has some omissions. Legler and Bennett have an intriguing reference to its deorbit parameters "302 x 126 nm." If correct, then I think this was the first orbiter flight to reach an altitude over 300 nautical miles (pretty much the domain of Hubble missions only, bar STS-33 and 95). I'm trying to find some confirmation of this. The mission report lists no orbital parameters. A publically available copy of "A Brief History of the DOD Space Test Program" has them redacted. Michael Cassutt's excellent 2009 Air&Space article doesn't mention them either. Spacefacts.de quotes Aviation Week listing a 322 statute mile orbit which is considerably less than 300nm. Anyone found any other references? I'm not interested in payload stuff, obviously that's classified. |
LM-12 Member Posts: 3208 From: Ontario, Canada Registered: Oct 2010
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posted 02-26-2018 08:38 AM
The NASA Mission Archives page for STS-33 mentions an orbit altitude of 302 nautical miles.The page for STS-51J (also DOD) shows an orbit altitude of 319 nautical miles. The page for STS-41C (Solar Max repair) shows an orbit altitude of 313 nautical miles. STS-41C seems to be the first shuttle flight to reach an altitude over 300 nautical miles. |
David C Member Posts: 1015 From: Lausanne Registered: Apr 2012
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posted 02-26-2018 02:30 PM
quote: Originally posted by LM-12: The page for STS-51J (also DOD) shows an orbit altitude of 319 nautical miles. The page for STS-41C (Solar Max repair) shows an orbit altitude of 313 nautical miles.
OK, those are very different to the Legler and Bennett (L&B) numbers.The highest number for 41C in L&B is 268nm. The STS-41C press kit states an intended LDEF deployment altitude of 250nm circular. This reference states 275nm (a substantial discrepancy). The mission report mentions that Solar Max was left in a 270nm circular orbit. Also that the original plan to reboost SMM into a 285nm orbit was cancelled because "Orbiter propellant was becoming a critical consumable." So 313nm for 41C seems unlikely to me. The highest numbers in L&B for 51J are 254nm x 254nm. The mission report omits any mention of orbital parameters. Hardly surprising for another classified mission. I'm not sure I really trust the NASA mission archives web pages. The amount of variation seems incredible. I'd really like supporting documentary evidence. |
Cozmosis22 Member Posts: 968 From: Texas * Earth Registered: Apr 2011
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posted 02-26-2018 05:41 PM
This KSC shuttle mission summary page for 41-C in 1984 also indicates an orbital altitude of 313 as Challenger chased down the Solar Max satellite for repair. |
Jim Behling Member Posts: 1463 From: Cape Canaveral, FL Registered: Mar 2010
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posted 02-26-2018 07:35 PM
The Solar Max Mission Delta launch press kit has insertion altitude at 355 miles, which is 308 nm as a start. The MPAD flight schedule card has the SMM at 268nm (308mi).My sources have: - 268 nm/308 sm for 41-C
- 277 nm/319 sm for 51-J
- 302 nm/348 sm for 33
- 334 nm/384 sm for 31
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David C Member Posts: 1015 From: Lausanne Registered: Apr 2012
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posted 02-27-2018 01:07 AM
Thanks Jim.I agree with 41C first above 300 statute miles (there were no really high altitudes until they changed to direct insertion on 41C). STS-33 first above 300 nautical miles. Do your sources have numbers for STS-82 and STS-103? For STS-82 I have 335.1 nm/385.6 sm and I reckon that was the highest ever for the program. For STS-103, I have 330 nm/380 sm. Curt Brown mentioned to me once that he'd been told STS-103 was the highest orbiter flight up to that point, but I've not been able to find any confirmation. |
David C Member Posts: 1015 From: Lausanne Registered: Apr 2012
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posted 02-28-2018 05:13 PM
quote: Originally posted by Cozmosis22: This KSC shuttle mission summary page for 41-C in 1984 also indicates an orbital altitude of 313...
Yeah, suspect that's wrong. These web pages seem to feed off each other and propagate errors, rather than going back to original sources. |
Jim Behling Member Posts: 1463 From: Cape Canaveral, FL Registered: Mar 2010
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posted 03-01-2018 07:06 AM
quote: Originally posted by David C: Do your sources have numbers for STS-82 and STS-103?
STS-82: 335 nm/385 sm STS-103: 330 nm/380 sm |
David C Member Posts: 1015 From: Lausanne Registered: Apr 2012
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posted 03-01-2018 04:58 PM
Thanks Jim. |
kyra Member Posts: 583 From: Louisville CO US Registered: Aug 2003
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posted 03-04-2018 04:30 AM
Was the geophysical model used for orbital calculations consistent throughout the 30 years of STS flights? For normal folks this is irrelevant, but for establishing a record with certainty, it might make a difference. |
David C Member Posts: 1015 From: Lausanne Registered: Apr 2012
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posted 03-05-2018 07:12 AM
Good question. I don't know, but to my knowledge the orbiter used M50 coordinates and Super G nav throughout its life. I can't really see why they would change the geophysical model but stick with M50 rather than change to J2000. |