LADEE Project Manager Update: Perigee Maneuver 1 Complete
The Lunar Atmosphere and Dust Environment Explorer (LADEE) team in the Mission Management Operations Center at NASA’s Ames Research Center in Silicon Valley, Calif.
The LADEE Observatory has completed the checkout phase of the mission, and is now in the cruise phase on the way to the moon. We are currently in elliptic orbits around Earth, called phasing loops, and will continue with two more of these elliptical orbits until LADEE is captured around the moon using an initial Lunar Orbit Insertion (LOI-1) burn on Sunday Oct. 6th. After that we are in lunar orbit.
The major activities this past week included testing the LADEE main engine for the first time. This was done in a maneuver called Apogee Maneuver-1 (AM-1). We originally planned to perform AM-1 on Tuesday, Sept 10, but when we were doing thermal conditioning rolls prior to AM-1, the spacecraft went into Safe Mode because of a combination of the roll rate and an alignment error between the two star tracker camera heads. We cancelled the planned AM-1 while we worked on the issue, and rescheduled it for the next day. The alignment calibration of the star tracker heads was updated, the thermal roll rate adjusted, and the revised AM-1 burn was successfully completed 4 p.m. PDT Sept. 11.
With that AM-1 test burn completed, we were then ready for the Perigee Maneuver-1 (PM-1) on Friday, Sept. 13. This maneuver was designed to increase the altitude of the elliptic orbit, to get the spacecraft closer to the moon. That burn was successfully completed at 9:36 a.m. PDT.
Butler Hine
LADEE Project Manager