План американских космических пусков

Автор Salo, 04.05.2009 17:34:56

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Salo

http://forum.nasaspaceflight.com/index.php?topic=8184.msg636794#msg636794
ЦитироватьLaunched:
№ – Дата, Время  (GMT)– КА – РКН/РБ – Космодром
Date, Time (GMT) - Satellite(s) - Rocket - Launch Site
01 - 8 February, 09:14 - STS-130 - Endeavour - Kennedy LC-39A
02 - 11 February, 15:23 - SDO - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
03 - 4 March, 23:57 - GOES-P - Delta IV-M+(4,2) - Canaveral SLC-37B
04 - 5 April, 10:21 - STS-131 - Discovery - Kennedy LC-39A
05 - 22 April, 23:52 - USA-212 (X-37B OTV-1) - Atlas V 501 - Canaveral SLC-41
06 - 14 May, 18:20 - STS-132 - Atlantis - Kennedy LC-39A
07 - 28 May, 03:00 - USA-213 (GPS IIF-1) - Delta IVM+(4,2) - Canaveral SLC-37B
08 - 4 June, 18:45 - DSQU - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
09 - 14 August, 11:07 - USA-214 (AEHF-1) - Atlas V 531 - Canaveral SLC-41
10 - 21 September, 04:03:30 - NRO L-41 - Atlas V 401 - Vandenberg SLC-3E
11 - 26 September, 04:41 - SBSS - Minotaur IV - Vandenberg SLC-8

Scheduled:
Дата, Время  (GMT)– КА – РКН/РБ – Космодром
Date, Time (GMT) - Satellite(s) - Rocket - Launch Site
30 October, 02:21-02:34 - COSMO-4 - Delta II 7420-10 - Vandenberg SLC-2W
1 November, 20:40 - STS-133/PLM - Discovery - Kennedy LC-39A
15 November - NRO L-32 - Delta IV-H -  Canaveral SLC-37B
18 November - Dragon C1 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
20 November - FASTSAT/FASTRAC-A/FASTRAC-B/FalconSat-4/OREOS/RAX - Minotaur IV - Kodiak LP-1
8 December - GPS IIF-2 - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41 - or February 2011
TBD - TacSat-4 - Minotaur IV - Kodiak LP-1


2011:
Date, Time (GMT) - Satellite(s) - Rocket - Launch Site
15 January - NRO L-49 - Delta IV-H - Vandenberg SLC-6
15 January- ORS-1 - Minotaur I - MARS LP-0B
23 February, 10:10 - Glory/Kysat/Hermes/Explorer-1' - Taurus-XL 3110 - Vandenberg LC-576E
27 February, 20:38 - STS-134/ELC-3/AMS - Endeavour - Kennedy LC-39A
4 March - X-37B OTV-2 FLT-1 - Atlas V 501 - Canaveral SLC-41
11 March - NRO L-27 - Delta IV-M+(4,2) - Canaveral SLC-37B
March - NRO L-66 - Minotaur 1-Vandenberg
31 March - NRO L-34 - Atlas V 501 - Vandenberg SLC-3E
14 April - Dragon C2 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
30 April - SBIRS-GEO 1 - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
6 June - Dragon C3 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40 - may be cancelled
9 June - SAC-D - Delta II 7320 - Vandenberg SLC-2W
23 June - GPS IIF-5 - Delta IV-M+(4,2) - Canaveral SLC-37B
20 July - Dragon CRS1 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
5 August, 15:54:55-16:24:55 - Juno - Atlas V 551 - Canaveral SLC-41
8 September - GRAIL - Delta II 7920H - Canaveral SLC-17B
September - TBD - Delta IV - TBD
3-rd quarter - Cygnus Demo - Taurus II - MARS LP-0A
18 October - NPP-Bridge - Delta II 7920 - Vandenberg SLC-2W
4 November - Dragon CRS2 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
25 November (NET) - MSL - Atlas V 541 - Canaveral SLC-41
15 December - NRO L-15 - Delta IV-H - Canaveral SLC-37B
4-th quarter - Cygnus CRS1 - Taurus II - MARS LP-0A
TBD - TBD - Falcon 1e - Omelek - Payload for MDA (Canada) or DemoSat
TBD - O2G (x3?) - Falcon 1e - Omelek
TBD - WGS-4 - Delta IV-M+(5,4) - Canaveral SLC-37B
TBD - NRO L-25 - Delta IV-M+(5,2) - Vandenberg SLC-6
TBD - SBIRS-GEO 2 - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
TBD - GPS IIF-3 - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41

2012:
Date, Time (GMT) - Satellite(s) - Rocket - Launch Site
3 February - NuSTAR - Pegasus-XL - Kwajalein
February - GPS IIF-4 - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
March or April  - AEHF-2 - Atlas V 531 - Canaveral SLC-41
13 April - TDRS-K - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
31 May - RBSP (x2) - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
NLT Summer - AEHF-3 - Atlas V 531 - Canaveral SLC-41
September - SET-1 - TBD - TBD
October - MUOS-1 - Atlas V 551 - Canaveral SLC-41
October - LADEE - Minotaur V  - MARS LP-0B
December - IRIS - Pegasus XL - Vandenberg
December - Landsat DCM - Atlas V 401 - Vandenberg SLC-3E
4Q? - GeoEye-2/TBD? - Atlas V 401 - Vandenberg SLC-3E
TBD? - WGS-5 - EELV - Canaveral
TBD - WGS-6 - EELV - Canaveral
TBD - Geospace ITSP - Taurus - Vandenberg LC-576E - ??
TBD - NRO L-45 - Atlas V - Vandenberg SLC-3E
TBD - NRO L-36 - EELV - TBD
TBD - Dragon CRS3 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
TBD - Dragon CRS4 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
TBD - SAOCOM-1A - Falcon 9 - Vandenberg SLC-4 - or Omelek
TBD - DragonLab-1 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
TBD - Cassiope - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
TBD - AMOS-4 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40 - or Omelek
TBD - DMSP-5D3 F19 - EELV - Vandenberg

Other
Date, Time (GMT) - Satellite(s) - Rocket - Launch Site
23 February 2013 - TDRS-L - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
18 November 2013 - MAVEN - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral
2013 - NRO L-35 - EELV - TBD
2013 - Dragon CRS5 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
2013 - Dragon CRS6 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
2013 - Dragon CRS7 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
2013 - SAOCOM-1B - Falcon 9 - Vandenberg SLC-4 (TBC) - or Omelek
2013 - DragonLab-2 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
2013 - NRO L-39 - Atlas V 501 - Vandenberg SLC-3E
May 2014 - GEMS - TBD - TBD
14 August 2014 - MMS - Atlas V 421 - Canaveral SLC-41
1 December 2014 - GPM - Taurus-XL - Vandenberg LC-576E - or November - multiple launches?
2014 - GPS IIIA-1 - EELV - Canaveral
2014 - NRO L-55 - EELV - TBD
2014 - DMSP-5D3 F20 - EELV - Vandenberg
2014 - Dragon CRS8 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
2014 - Dragon CRS9 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
2014 - Dragon CRS10 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
2014 - Sundancer - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
2014 - O2G (x3?) - Falcon 1e - Omelek
May 2015 - Discovery 12 - TBD - TBD
October 2015 - GOES-R - TBD - Canaveral
December 2015 - TDRS-M - EELV - Canaveral
2015 - SIM-Lite - Atlas V 431? - Canaveral SLC-41 - or equivalent rocket
2015 - NRO L-37 - Delta IV-H - TBD
2015 - Dragon CRS11 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
2015 - Dragon CRS12 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
February 2016 - ICESat-II - TBD - TBD
December 2016 - TDRS-N - EELV - Canaveral
2016 - ExoMars orbiter/lander - Atlas V - Canaveral SLC-41
February 2017 - GOES-S - TBD - Canaveral
2016 - ExoMars rover - Atlas V - Canaveral
August 2018 - Solar Probe Plus - TBD - TBD
April 2019 - GOES-T - TBD - Canaveral
September 2020 - ITSP - TBD - TBD
2020 - LISA - TBD - TBD
2020 - IXO - TBD - TBD
2021 - GEC - TBD - TBD - ??
January 2022 - Solar Sentinals - TBD - TBD
April 2024 - GOES-U - EELV - Canaveral
TBD - GPS IIF-6 - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
TBD - GPS IIF-7 - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
TBD - GPS IIF-8 - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
TBD - GPS IIF-9 - Delta IV-M+(4,2) - Canaveral SLC-37B
TBD - GPS IIF-10 - Delta IV-M+(4,2) - Canaveral SLC-37B
TBD - GPS IIF-11 - EELV - Canaveral - ??
TBD - GPS IIF-12 - EELV - Canaveral - ??
TBD - SBIRS-GEO 3 - Delta IV-M+(4,2) - Canaveral SLC-37B
TBD - MUOS-2 - Atlas V 551? - Canaveral SLC-41
TBD - NRO L-38 - EELV - TBD
TBD - O2G (x3?) - Falcon 1e - Omelek
TBD - O2G (x3?) - Falcon 1e - Omelek
TBD - O2G (x3?) - Falcon 1e - Omelek
TBD - O2G (x3?) - Falcon 1e - Omelek

Probably cancelled
Date - Satellite(s) - Rocket - Launch Site - Time (GMT)
TBD - NRO L-29 (Imp. Onyx?) - Atlas V 501 - Vandenberg
TBD - TacSat-1A - Falcon 1e - Omelek
TBD - Argo (RapidEye 6) - Falcon 1e - Omelek
TBD - Several microsats - Falcon 1e - Omelek
March 2014 - NPOESS-1 - EELV - Vandenberg
May 2016 - NPOESS-2 - EELV - Vandenberg
January 2020 - NPOESS-3 - EELV - Vandenberg
January 2022 - NPOESS-4 - EELV - Vandenberg
December 2013? - Orion 1 - Ares I - Kennedy
September 2014 - Orion 2 - Ares I - Kennedy - or March 2015
2015? - Orion 3 - Ares I - Kennedy
March 2016 - Orion 4 - Ares I - Kennedy
TBD - Orion 5 - Ares I - Kennedy
TBD - Orion 6 - Ares I - Kennedy
TBD - Orion 7 - Ares I - Kennedy
TBD - Orion 8 - Ares I - Kennedy
TBD - Orion 9 - Ares I - Kennedy
TBD - Orion 10 - Ares I - Kennedy
TBD - Orion 11 - Ares I - Kennedy
TBD - Orion 12 - Ares I - Kennedy
June 2019? - Orion 13 - Ares I - Kennedy
TBD - Orion 14 - Ares I - Kennedy
December 2019? - Orion 15 - Ares I - Kennedy
TBD - Orion 16 - Ares I - Kennedy
June 2020? - Orion 17 - Ares I - Kennedy
June 2018 - Ares V-Y - Ares V - Kennedy
June 2019? - Altair 1 - Ares V - Kennedy
December 2019? - Altair 2 - Ares V - Kennedy
June 2020? - Altair 3 - Ares V - Kennedy
TBD - AFSPC-2 - Atlas V 541 - Canaveral SLC-41 - ??

** - range conflict
Updates:
Red: 14 September 2010
Сокращения:
TBD - подлежит определению;
NET - не ранее чем;
NLT - не позднее чем.

Изменения от 21 сентября
Изменения от 1 октября
Изменения от 2 октября
Изменения от 14 октября
Изменения от 16 октября
Изменения от 20 октября
Изменения от 24 октября
"Были когда-то и мы рысаками!!!"

Salo

http://www.spacenews.com/launch/100922-spacex-targets-november-dragon.html
ЦитироватьWed, 22 September, 2010
SpaceX Targets November for Dragon Demo Flight[/size]
By Amy Klamper

    WASHINGTON — Hawthorne, Calif.-based Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) has shifted a planned Oct. 23 launch of its Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon cargo vessel to November.

    "Our targeted launch date is moving — we've submitted a request for November 8th or 9th and are waiting for the range to complete their standard deconfliction work and provide a formal approval," SpaceX spokeswoman Kirstin Brost said in a Sept. 21 e-mail.
"Были когда-то и мы рысаками!!!"

Salo

"Были когда-то и мы рысаками!!!"

Salo

http://www.spaceflightnow.com/tracking/index.html
ЦитироватьFeb. 23     Taurus  •  Glory
Launch time: 1010 GMT (5:10 a.m. EST; 2:10 a.m. PST)
Launch site: SLC-576E, Vandenberg Air Force Base, California


Feb. 27     Shuttle Endeavour   •  ULF 6
Launch time: 2038 GMT (3:38 p.m. EST)
Launch site: LC-39A, Kennedy Space Center, Florida


April 14     Falcon 9  •  Dragon C2
Launch window: TBD
Launch site: SLC-40, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station
"Были когда-то и мы рысаками!!!"

интересующийся

http://www.lockheedmartin.com/news/press_releases/2010/1004_ss_geoeye2.html
ЦитироватьNext-Generation GeoEye-2 Satellite Prepares for Preliminary Design Review
SUNNYVALE, Calif., October 4th, 2010 -- IKONOS, the world's first commercial, high-resolution Earth-imaging satellite, designed and built by Lockheed Martin [NYSE] and currently operated by GeoEye, Inc. (NASDAQ: GEOY), has achieved 11 years of successful on-orbit operations.

A first-of-its-kind satellite, IKONOS was launched on Sept. 24, 1999 to provide high-resolution imagery of the Earth for worldwide commercial and government customers. The spacecraft continues to collect 0.82-meter resolution black-and-white images while simultaneously collecting four-meter resolution multispectral data more than four years beyond its initial design life. These images are used for a wide-range of applications, including land management, environmental monitoring, local and regional government, national security, disaster relief, and other geospatial applications.

Lockheed Martin Space Systems is progressing steadily under a contract to design, build, and launch GeoEye's next-generation, commercial Earth-imaging satellite, known as GeoEye-2. The spacecraft, based on the latest generation of the LMx configure to order low earth orbit bus product line initiated with IKONOS, will feature a new high-resolution ITT camera that has been in development for more than two years. In August, the team successfully completed a System Requirements Review on schedule, proving the design maturity and readiness for the Preliminary Design Review set for later this year.

GeoEye-2 will be launched aboard an Atlas V rocket provided by Lockheed Martin Commercial Launch Services and will be operational in early 2013.

"We are proud of the high performance and longevity of IKONOS and the significant value it is providing to GeoEye and its customers around the globe," said Allen Anderson, Lockheed Martin's GeoEye-2 program director. "We look forward to delivering even greater remote sensing capabilities as we work swiftly to deliver a total system solution and achieve mission success on the GeoEye-2 program."

Lockheed Martin is developing GeoEye-2 under a fixed-price contract to support the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency's EnhancedView commercial imagery program. GeoEye was awarded an EnhancedView contract on Aug. 6, 2010, worth up to $3.8 billion over the next 10 years. EnhancedView is designed to provide critical geospatial situational awareness and global security information to intelligence analysts, war fighters, and decision makers. GeoEye's commercial users will also benefit from access to imagery from GeoEye-2.
Бывает, что усердие превозмогает и рассудок

Salo

http://msdb.gsfc.nasa.gov/launches.php
Цитировать11/16/2010   NROL-32
11/20/2010   FASTSAT-HSV01 (STP-S26 mission)
"Были когда-то и мы рысаками!!!"

Salo

http://www.nasa.gov/home/hqnews/2010/jun/C10-033_NASA_IRIS.html
ЦитироватьNASA has selected Orbital Sciences Corporation of Dulles, Va., to launch the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph spacecraft known as IRIS. The spacecraft will fly in December 2012 aboard a Pegasus XL rocket from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif.
"Были когда-то и мы рысаками!!!"

С.В.Драгунов

Хлопцы, а по русски нельзя план запусков америкосов, япосов и проч. дать?
Ну не дружу я с аглицким!

Токо "ногами не бейте"!
Есть возможность - спасиба! Ну, а нет, - так и нет...

Salo

Индийский и японский планы как раз на русском языке. Или названия КА и РН тоже нужно переводить ?
"Были когда-то и мы рысаками!!!"

Космос-3794

Запуск первого SBIRS запланирован на 30 апреля 2011, что ставит под вопрос дату запуска OTV-2:
 
ЦитироватьWith the first satellite nearing completion of its final test activities, Air Force officials decided the week of Oct. 4 to plan for an April 30 launch aboard an Atlas 5 rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station
Носитель только  Atlas 5:
Цитировать...the Atlas 5 is the only rocket in the U.S. fleet that meets the SBIRS deployment requirements...

http://www.spacenews.com/military/sbirs-narrow-window.html

Salo

http://msdb.gsfc.nasa.gov/launches.php
ЦитироватьMAR 2011   NROL-34
6/1/2011   SAC-D/Aquarius
NLT Summer 2012   AEHF 3
"Были когда-то и мы рысаками!!!"

Космос-3794

The revised 2011 schedule for the Atlas 5 rocket:

The year begins with launching the second Orbital Test Vehicle in the U.S. military's X-37B experimental spaceplane program. Liftoff of OTV 2 from Cape Canaveral is targeted for March 4.

A classified payload for the U.S. National Reconnaissance Office will fly from the West Coast pad at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. Launch of NROL-34 is planned for March 31.

Back at Cape Canaveral, another Air Force mission carries the first Space Based Infrared System Geosynchronous satellite for missile early-warning detection. SBIRS Geo 1 has an April 30 target launch date.

Then comes NASA's Juno probe embarking on a scientific expedition to orbit the planet Jupiter. The craft must launch between August 5 and 26, a critical window dictated by when the planets are properly aligned to begin the trek.

The Mars Science Laboratory has its own planetary launch window to leave Earth between November 25 and December 18, dispatching the SUV-size rover "Curiosity" toward a landing on the Red Planet's surface.

And the AEHF 2 satellite now shoots for early 2012, launching in March or April.

http://www.spaceflightnow.com/atlas/av019/101019aehf2.html

Salo

Спасибо! :wink:

http://www.spaceflightnow.com/tracking/index.html
ЦитироватьNov. 15     Delta 4-Heavy  •  NROL-32
"Были когда-то и мы рысаками!!!"

Космос-3794

MAVEN - Atlas 5-401- окно: Nov. 18 - Dec. 7 in 2013.

ЦитироватьNASA has selected an Atlas 5 rocket to launch an orbiter in November 2013.
The mission will use the Atlas 5's basic configuration with no solid rocket boosters, a single-engine Centaur upper stage and a 4-meter payload shroud.
The preliminary launch period, when the orbits of Earth and Mars are properly aligned for an interplanetary journey, opens Nov. 18 and closes Dec. 7 in 2013.
The total value of the launch service is $187 million. That cost includes the Atlas 5 rocket and additional contracts for payload processing, launch vehicle integration, mission-unique ground support, and tracking and telemetry services, according to a NASA press release.

http://www.spaceflightnow.com/news/n1010/21maven/

Salo

http://www.spaceflightnow.com/tracking/index.html
ЦитироватьNov. 18     Falcon 9  •  Dragon C1

2011
June 9     Delta 2  •  SAC-D/Aquarius
3rd Quarter     Taurus 2  •  Cygnus 1
http://www.spacenews.com/contracts/102210orbital-warns-investors-prolonged-budget-battle-will-harm-2011-earnings.html
ЦитироватьFri, 22 October, 2010
Orbital Warns Investors Prolonged U.S. Budget Battle Will Harm 2011 Earnings[/size]
By Peter B. de Selding

    PARIS — Satellite and launch-vehicle manufacturer Orbital Sciences Corp. on Oct. 21 reported double-digit increases in revenue, operating income and net profit but said its 2011 financial performance could drop by 6 percent to 8 percent from expected levels if the U.S. government does not conclude a final 2011 budget before spring.

    The Dulles, Va.-based company said its biggest ongoing investment — development of the Taurus 2 medium-lift rocket and the Cygnus cargo vehicle it will launch to the international space station — has encountered more delays. Its inaugural launch from Wallops Island, Va., is now set for between July and September.

    Whether that flight serves only to demonstrate Taurus 2's abilities or also carries the Cygnus freighter will depend on whether the U.S. Congress appropriates the money for a rocket-only flight when it finally enacts NASA's budget for 2011. If that money, which would come out of the additional $300 million NASA has requested for its Commercial Orbital Transportation Services program, is forthcoming, a successful Taurus 2-only demonstration could be followed, about three months later, with a Taurus 2 Cygnus launch to the space station.
"Были когда-то и мы рысаками!!!"

Salo

ЦитироватьПуск перенесён на 2 ноября на 16:17 EDT (23:17 ДМВ)
ЦитироватьThe launch of space shuttle Discovery is targeted for Tuesday, Nov. 2, at 4:17 p.m. EDT.
http://www.spaceflightnow.com/tracking/index.html
ЦитироватьOct. 31     Delta 2  •  COSMO-SkyMed 4

Jan. 11     Delta 4-Heavy  •  NROL-49

Feb. 27     Shuttle Endeavour   •  ULF 6
Launch time: 2035 GMT (3:35 p.m. EST)

Spring     Minotaur 4  •  TacSat 4
Launched:
№ – Дата, Время (GMT)– КА – РКН/РБ – Космодром
Date, Time (GMT) - Satellite(s) - Rocket - Launch Site
01 - 8 February, 09:14 - STS-130 - Endeavour - Kennedy LC-39A
02 - 11 February, 15:23 - SDO - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
03 - 4 March, 23:57 - GOES-P - Delta IV-M+(4,2) - Canaveral SLC-37B
04 - 5 April, 10:21 - STS-131 - Discovery - Kennedy LC-39A
05 - 22 April, 23:52 - USA-212 (X-37B OTV-1) - Atlas V 501 - Canaveral SLC-41
06 - 14 May, 18:20 - STS-132 - Atlantis - Kennedy LC-39A
07 - 28 May, 03:00 - USA-213 (GPS IIF-1) - Delta IVM+(4,2) - Canaveral SLC-37B
08 - 4 June, 18:45 - DSQU - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
09 - 14 August, 11:07 - USA-214 (AEHF-1) - Atlas V 531 - Canaveral SLC-41
10 - 21 September, 04:03:30 - NRO L-41 - Atlas V 401 - Vandenberg SLC-3E
11 - 26 September, 04:41 - SBSS - Minotaur IV - Vandenberg SLC-8
12 - 6 November, 02:20:03 - COSMO-4 - Delta II 7420-10 - Vandenberg SLC-2W

Scheduled:
Дата, Время (GMT)– КА – РКН/РБ – Космодром
Date, Time (GMT) - Satellite(s) - Rocket - Launch Site
18 November, 23:10 - NRO L-32 - Delta IV-H - Canaveral SLC-37B
20 November - FASTSAT/FASTRAC-A/FASTRAC-B/FalconSat-4/OREOS/RAX - Minotaur IV - Kodiak LP-1
30 November - STS-133/PLM - Discovery - Kennedy LC-39A
7 December,  13:55-17:05 - Dragon C1 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40

2011:
Date, Time (GMT) - Satellite(s) - Rocket - Launch Site
11 January - NRO L-49 - Delta IV-H - Vandenberg SLC-6
23 February, 10:10 - Glory/Kysat/Hermes/Explorer-1' - Taurus-XL 3110 - Vandenberg LC-576E
27 February, 20:35 - STS-134/ELC-3/AMS - Endeavour - Kennedy LC-39A
4 March - X-37B OTV-2 FLT-1 - Atlas V 501 - Canaveral SLC-41
11 March - NRO L-27 - Delta IV-M+(4,2) - Canaveral SLC-37B
March - NRO L-66 - Minotaur 1-Vandenberg
31 March - NRO L-34 - Atlas V 501 - Vandenberg SLC-3E
6 April - ORS-1 - Minotaur I - MARS LP-0B
14 April - Dragon C2 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
30 April - SBIRS-GEO 1 - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
Spring - TacSat-4 - Minotaur IV - Kodiak LP-1
6 June - Dragon C3 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40 - may be cancelled
9 June - SAC-D - Delta II 7320 - Vandenberg SLC-2W
23 June - GPS IIF-5 - Delta IV-M+(4,2) - Canaveral SLC-37B
20 July - Dragon CRS1 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
5 August, 15:54:55-16:24:55 - Juno - Atlas V 551 - Canaveral SLC-41
8 September - GRAIL - Delta II 7920H - Canaveral SLC-17B
September - TBD - Delta IV - TBD
3-rd quarter - Risk reduction test flight - Taurus II - MARS
18 October - NPP-Bridge - Delta II 7920 - Vandenberg SLC-2W
4 November - Dragon CRS2 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
25 November (NET) - MSL - Atlas V 541 - Canaveral SLC-41
15 December - NRO L-15 - Delta IV-H - Canaveral SLC-37B
NET December - WGS-4 - Delta IV-M+(5,4) - Canaveral SLC-37B
4-th quarter - Cygnus Demo - Taurus II - MARS LP-0A
TBD - TBD - Falcon 1e - Omelek - Payload for MDA (Canada) or DemoSat
TBD - O2G (x3?) - Falcon 1e - Omelek
TBD - NRO L-25 - Delta IV-M+(5,2) - Vandenberg SLC-6
TBD - SBIRS-GEO 2 - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
TBD - GPS IIF-3 - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41

2012:
Date, Time (GMT) - Satellite(s) - Rocket - Launch Site
3 February - NuSTAR - Pegasus-XL - Kwajalein
February - GPS IIF-4 - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
March or April - AEHF-2 - Atlas V 531 - Canaveral SLC-41
1-st quarter - Cygnus CRS1 - Taurus II - MARS LP-0A
13 April - TDRS-K - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
31 May - RBSP (x2) - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
NLT Summer - AEHF-3 - Atlas V 531 - Canaveral SLC-41
September - SET-1 - TBD - TBD
October - MUOS-1 - Atlas V 551 - Canaveral SLC-41
October - LADEE - Minotaur V - MARS LP-0B
December - IRIS - Pegasus XL - Vandenberg
December - Landsat DCM - Atlas V 401 - Vandenberg SLC-3E
4Q? - GeoEye-2/TBD? - Atlas V 401 - Vandenberg SLC-3E
TBD - GPS IIF-2 - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
TBD? - WGS-5 - EELV - Canaveral
TBD - WGS-6 - EELV - Canaveral
TBD - Geospace ITSP - Taurus - Vandenberg LC-576E - ??
TBD - NRO L-45 - Atlas V - Vandenberg SLC-3E
TBD - NRO L-36 - EELV - TBD
TBD - Dragon CRS3 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
TBD - Dragon CRS4 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
TBD - SAOCOM-1A - Falcon 9 - Vandenberg SLC-4 - or Omelek
TBD - DragonLab-1 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
TBD - Cassiope - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
TBD - AMOS-4 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40 - or Omelek
TBD - DMSP-5D3 F19 - EELV - Vandenberg

Other
Date, Time (GMT) - Satellite(s) - Rocket - Launch Site
23 February 2013 - TDRS-L - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
18 November 2013 - MAVEN - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral
2013 - NRO L-35 - EELV - TBD
2013 - Dragon CRS5 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
2013 - Dragon CRS6 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
2013 - Dragon CRS7 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
2013 - SAOCOM-1B - Falcon 9 - Vandenberg SLC-4 (TBC) - or Omelek
2013 - DragonLab-2 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
2013 - NRO L-39 - Atlas V 501 - Vandenberg SLC-3E
May 2014 - GEMS - TBD - TBD
14 August 2014 - MMS - Atlas V 421 - Canaveral SLC-41
1 December 2014 - GPM - Taurus-XL - Vandenberg LC-576E - or November - multiple launches?
3-rd quarter 2014 - Formosat-7 (6 sat) - Minotaur-4 - Vandenberg
2014 - GPS IIIA-1 - EELV - Canaveral
2014 - NRO L-55 - EELV - TBD
2014 - DMSP-5D3 F20 - EELV - Vandenberg
2014 - Dragon CRS8 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
2014 - Dragon CRS9 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
2014 - Dragon CRS10 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
2014 - Sundancer - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
2014 - O2G (x3?) - Falcon 1e - Omelek
May 2015 - Discovery 12 - TBD - TBD
October 2015 - GOES-R - TBD - Canaveral
December 2015 - TDRS-M - EELV - Canaveral
2015 - SIM-Lite - Atlas V 431? - Canaveral SLC-41 - or equivalent rocket
2015 - NRO L-37 - Delta IV-H - TBD
2015 - Dragon CRS11 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
2015 - Dragon CRS12 - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
2015  1-st quarter- Iridium Next  - Falcon 9 - Canaveral SLC-40
February 2016 - ICESat-II - TBD - TBD
3-rd quarter 2016 - Formosat-7 (7 sat) - Minotaur-4 - Vandenberg
December 2016 - TDRS-N - EELV - Canaveral
2016 - ExoMars orbiter/lander - Atlas V - Canaveral SLC-41
2016 - ExoMars rover - Atlas V - Canaveral
February 2017 - GOES-S - TBD - Canaveral
August 2018 - Solar Probe Plus - TBD - TBD
April 2019 - GOES-T - TBD - Canaveral
September 2020 - ITSP - TBD - TBD
2020 - LISA - TBD - TBD
2020 - IXO - TBD - TBD
2021 - GEC - TBD - TBD - ??
January 2022 - Solar Sentinals - TBD - TBD
April 2024 - GOES-U - EELV - Canaveral
TBD - GPS IIF-6 - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
TBD - GPS IIF-7 - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
TBD - GPS IIF-8 - Atlas V 401 - Canaveral SLC-41
TBD - GPS IIF-9 - Delta IV-M+(4,2) - Canaveral SLC-37B
TBD - GPS IIF-10 - Delta IV-M+(4,2) - Canaveral SLC-37B
TBD - GPS IIF-11 - EELV - Canaveral - ??
TBD - GPS IIF-12 - EELV - Canaveral - ??
TBD - SBIRS-GEO 3 - Delta IV-M+(4,2) - Canaveral SLC-37B
TBD - MUOS-2 - Atlas V 551? - Canaveral SLC-41
TBD - NRO L-38 - EELV - TBD
TBD - O2G (x3?) - Falcon 1e - Omelek
TBD - O2G (x3?) - Falcon 1e - Omelek
TBD - O2G (x3?) - Falcon 1e - Omelek
TBD - O2G (x3?) - Falcon 1e - Omelek

Probably cancelled
Date - Satellite(s) - Rocket - Launch Site - Time (GMT)
TBD - NRO L-29 (Imp. Onyx?) - Atlas V 501 - Vandenberg
TBD - TacSat-1A - Falcon 1e - Omelek
TBD - Argo (RapidEye 6) - Falcon 1e - Omelek
TBD - Several microsats - Falcon 1e - Omelek
March 2014 - NPOESS-1 - EELV - Vandenberg
May 2016 - NPOESS-2 - EELV - Vandenberg
January 2020 - NPOESS-3 - EELV - Vandenberg
January 2022 - NPOESS-4 - EELV - Vandenberg
December 2013? - Orion 1 - Ares I - Kennedy
September 2014 - Orion 2 - Ares I - Kennedy - or March 2015
2015? - Orion 3 - Ares I - Kennedy
March 2016 - Orion 4 - Ares I - Kennedy
TBD - Orion 5 - Ares I - Kennedy
TBD - Orion 6 - Ares I - Kennedy
TBD - Orion 7 - Ares I - Kennedy
TBD - Orion 8 - Ares I - Kennedy
TBD - Orion 9 - Ares I - Kennedy
TBD - Orion 10 - Ares I - Kennedy
TBD - Orion 11 - Ares I - Kennedy
TBD - Orion 12 - Ares I - Kennedy
June 2019? - Orion 13 - Ares I - Kennedy
TBD - Orion 14 - Ares I - Kennedy
December 2019? - Orion 15 - Ares I - Kennedy
TBD - Orion 16 - Ares I - Kennedy
June 2020? - Orion 17 - Ares I - Kennedy
June 2018 - Ares V-Y - Ares V - Kennedy
June 2019? - Altair 1 - Ares V - Kennedy
December 2019? - Altair 2 - Ares V - Kennedy
June 2020? - Altair 3 - Ares V - Kennedy
TBD - AFSPC-2 - Atlas V 541 - Canaveral SLC-41 - ??

** - range conflict

Сокращения:
TBD - подлежит определению;
NET - не ранее чем;
NLT - не позднее чем.

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"Были когда-то и мы рысаками!!!"

Salo

http://www.aviationweek.com/aw/generic/story_channel.jsp?channel=space&id=news/asd/2010/10/29/10.xml&headline=Iridium%20Satellite%20Contract%20Takes%20Effect
ЦитироватьActual work on the constellation, dubbed Iridium Next, began over the summer after an agreement for authorization to proceed was reached in June. The satellites will be based on Thales Alenia Space's standard low Earth orbit bus, also utilized for the Globalstar 2 and O3b constellations, but some 40% of design and production, including final assembly, will be handled by U.S. firms. Launch of the first satellites, aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9, is expected in the first quarter of 2015.
"Были когда-то и мы рысаками!!!"

Salo

ЦитироватьSpace Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) is awaiting U.S. regulatory approval to launch its Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon cargo vessel as soon as Nov. 20. The first COTS demonstration mission is now scheduled to launch from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla., no earlier than Nov. 20. FAA is still reviewing a number of key pieces of information about the re-entry that it requested in June 2009 but did not receive until Oct. 29, 2010.

http://www.spacenews.com/venture_space/111005-spacex-awaiting-faa-approval-license.html
"Были когда-то и мы рысаками!!!"

Salo

Formosat-7:
ЦитироватьThe mission will be launched by the Minotaur IV. For the second phase, there might be one additional spare satellite. Development started since early 2010.

More information: http://www.uni-graz.at/opac2010/pdf_presentation/opac_2010_yen_nick_presentation49.pdf
"Были когда-то и мы рысаками!!!"

Salo

http://www.spacenews.com/satellite_telecom/101110-orbcomm-switching-falcon9.html
ЦитироватьThu, 11 November, 2010
Orbcomm Switching to Falcon 9 for its Tardy Second-Gen Satellites[/size]
By Peter B. de Selding

LONDON — Satellite messaging service provider Orbcomm said its second-generation satellites will not be ready before next spring, several months later than planned, with the first two spacecraft to launch as piggyback passengers on a large SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, and not the smaller Falcon 1 as originally intended.

Orbcomm, in a contract-change notice given to satellite manufacturer Sierra Nevada Corp. (SNC), said it has dropped the requirement that the satellites be compatible with Russian, Indian and other U.S. rockets, which had been viewed as backup alternatives. The 18 second-generation satellites are now entirely in the hands of Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX), a startup launch-services provider based in Hawthorne, Calif.


The decision to launch the first batch of Orbcomm's second-generation satellites on a Falcon 9, and to incur the $4 million in charges to make the satellites compatible with that vehicle, are detailed in a Nov. 9 Orbcomm filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).

In a Nov. 11 e-mail, Orbcomm Chief Executive Marc Eisenberg declined to say how far behind schedule SNC is in Orbcomm satellite production. He said part of the delay was caused by the need to make the satellites compatible with Falcon 9, a vehicle he said provided a less-expensive, lower-risk alternative to Falcon 1 for the first two satellites.

Eisenberg said the 16 remaining Orbcomm satellites are scheduled for launch by SpaceX, on Falcon 1 or Falcon 9 rockets, at intervals of between six and nine months.

 SpaceX is under a $46.6 million contract to launch the 18-satellite second-generation Orbcomm constellation. Orbcomm currently operates 28 satellites in low Earth orbit.

The first two second-generation satellites will be launched aboard a Falcon 9 scheduled to make the second demonstration launch of SpaceX's Dragon unmanned freighter as a precursor to a multilaunch NASA contract to supply the international space station.
The first Dragon launch has suffered repeated delays and is now tentatively set for December.

In a Nov. 9 conference call with investors, Eisenberg said the manufacturing delay at Sparks, Nev.-based SNC do not appear to be severe enough to place into question the readiness of a first batch of satellites to make the Falcon 9 launch, now scheduled for between April and June 2011.

For a Falcon 1 launch, Orbcomm likely would be the primary passenger, meaning the rocket waits for the satellites. For the Falcon 9, Orbcomm's launch date will be subject to SpaceX's Dragon launch schedule.

Ft. Lee, N.J.-based Orbcomm contracted with SNC in May 2008 to build 18 second-generation Orbcomm satellites for $117 million, with an option to build up to 30 more for between $5 million and $7.7 million per satellite, depending on how many more are ordered, and when.

SNC, which is working with Boeing Co. on the Orbcomm program, had agreed to be ready for a preshipment review of the satellites 24 months after the contract. This is the deadline that was missed.

It is unclear whether Orbcomm could have retained a Falcon 1 launch if SNC had been on schedule, with the first satellites ready for launch in late 2010, or whether the launch vehicle has been subject to availability issues of its own.

Orbcomm signed the launcher-switch agreement with SNC Aug. 31, according to the SEC filing. SNC will bill Orbcomm about $4.1 million to modify the satellites to be launched either on Falcon 1 or on Falcon 9. The agreement includes a $1.5 million credit SNC has given Orbcomm for future services.

Orbcomm said it is in negotiations with SNC "regarding the impact" of the manufacturing delay.

Orbcomm said its current constellation is in good health. But a promising new business line of providing an Automatic Identification Service (AIS) to coastal authorities about what ships are nearby is now being supported by only one satellite — one of six launched in June 2008.

Five of those six satellites have failed in orbit, and Orbcomm has collected on an insurance claim. But it retained $10 million in rights not covered by the insurance payment and sought compensation from the prime contractor of the six spacecraft, OHB Technology of Bremen, Germany.

Orbcomm and OHB have settled all issues related to these six so-called Quick Launch satellites as part of an agreement that calls for OHB, through its LuxSpace subsidiary, to build and launch, by mid-2011, two AIS satellites that will be leased by Orbcomm. All second-generation Orbcomm satellites will be equipped with AIS terminals in addition to their core messaging function.

Orbcomm reported that for the three months ending Sept. 30, revenue excluding one-time gains increased by nearly 14 percent, to $8 million, compared to the same period a year ago. The company is cash-flow positive and has signed new multiyear contracts with three of its top customers, each of which accounts for 10 percent or more of Orbcomm revenue: Komatsu Ltd., Caterpillar Inc. and AI, the former General Electric Asset Intelligence division.
"Были когда-то и мы рысаками!!!"