Three Atlases processing at Cape Canaveral; Titan IV readied at Cape
Canaveral; Titan II at Vandenberg AFB
Five Lockheed
Martin-built launch vehicles – three Atlases and two Titans – are in launch
facilities on the East and West coasts and are making progress toward
planned launch dates over the next five months. All five vehicles are
different configurations including the Atlas IIA, Atlas III, Atlas V, Titan
IV B and Titan II.
“Lockheed Martin’s rocket ‘full house’ highlights a four-decade span of
launch capability from the 1960s-era Titan II still in use to the new Atlas
V, which debuted in August and is now approaching its second mission,” said
G. Thomas Marsh, Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company Astronautics
Operations president. “This diversity, which represents lift capability from
smaller satellites to the largest built, is unprecedented in the space
launch industry.”
Lockheed Martin shipped three different Atlas vehicles to the Cape Canaveral
launch sites within a month, demonstrating the rocket factory’s ability to
build and deliver multiple product lines in a short span. The Atlas missions
are managed by International Launch Services (ILS), a joint venture of
Lockheed Martin and two Russian companies.
At Launch Complex 36A, an Atlas IIA stands ready to launch NASA’s TDRS-J
satellite Dec. 4. This will be the 23rd and final Atlas IIA to launch,
closing out a run of 100 percent Mission Success for all Atlas II variants
going back to 1991.
At Complex 36B an Atlas III booster was mounted on the launch pad Nov. 4,
and the Centaur upper stage was stacked atop the booster Nov. 8. This will
be the third Atlas III launch, following the two successful missions in May
2000 and February of this year. The Atlas III is being processed for a
planned launch of the AsiaSat 4 satellite in the early part of 2003.
At Complex 41 the team has begun processing the second Atlas V – designated
AV-002 – for a planned launch early next year with the first satellite for
the Greek-Cypriot consortium Hellas-Sat. The booster was erected in the
vertical integration facility Oct. 23; the Centaur upper stage was stacked
atop the booster Oct. 28. Before launching AV-002 next year, Lockheed Martin
will use it for “pathfinding” activities for the Atlas V 500 series. The
500-series configuration uses a new, larger 5.4-meter diameter payload
fairing, which will enable even larger satellites to be flown on the Atlas
series. The Atlas team will attach a simulated payload mass and the new 5.4
meter payload fairing atop the vehicle and roll this configuration to the
pad for a practice countdown known as “wet dress rehearsal” Dec. 17, 18 and
19. AV-002 will then be reconfigured for the Hellas-Sat mission as a
400-series vehicle with a 4-meter diameter payload fairing.
Rounding out the activity at Cape Canaveral, the Titan team is preparing a
Titan IV B to launch the Milstar Flight 6 military communications satellite
for the U.S. Air Force in early 2003. The heavy-lift Titan IV B is the
workhorse of the national security space program and will carry critical
heavy payloads through 2005. Including this vehicle, there are five Titan
IVs left to fly. At Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., Lockheed Martin is
preparing to launch a refurbished intercontinental ballistic missile – the
Titan II – in December from Space Launch Complex 4 West carrying the
Coriolis satellite for the U.S. Air Force.
Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company, headquartered in Denver, Colo., is
one of the major operating units of Lockheed Martin Corporation. Space
Systems designs, develops, tests, manufactures and operates a variety of
advanced technology systems for military, civil and commercial customers.
Chief products include a full-range of space launch systems, including
heavy-lift capability, ground systems, remote sensing and communications
satellites for commercial and government customers, advanced space
observatories and interplanetary spacecraft, fleet ballistic missiles and
missile defense systems.
ILS, based in McLean, Va., offers launch services to customers worldwide on
the Lockheed Martin Atlas and the Russian Proton rocket built by Khrunichev
State Research and Production Space Center and RSC Energia. ILS offers the
broadest range of launch services in the world along with products with the
highest reliability in the industry. For more information, visit
www.ilslaunch.com.
Headquartered in Bethesda, Md., Lockheed Martin is a highly diversified
global enterprise principally engaged in the research, design, development,
manufacture and integration of advanced-technology systems, products and
services. The Corporation’s core businesses span space and
telecommunications, electronics, information and services, aeronautics,
energy and systems integration. Lockheed Martin had 2001 sales surpassing
$24 billion.
Contact:
Julie Andrews, Lockheed Martin, Cape Canaveral
321-853-1567, julie.c.andrews@lmco.com
Fran Slimmer, ILS
571-633-7462, fran.slimmer@lmco.com