[Launch Alert] Sunday Missile Launch
Brian Webb
[email protected]
Sat, 4 Jan 2003 09:04:55 -0800
ASTRONOMY/SPACE ALERT FOR SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Brian Webb, KD6NRP
Ventura County, California
E-mail: [email protected]
Web Site: http://home.earthlink.net/~kd6nrp
2003 January 14 (Saturday) 08:55 PST
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SUNDAY VANDENBERG LAUNCH
After several delays, the Air Force will make another attempt on
Sunday to launch the Coriolis military R&D satellite. A Titan II
booster carrying the spacecraft is set to lift-off from Vandenberg
AFB tomorrow morning at 06:18 PST, the start of a 15-minute launch
window.
Following lift-off, the refurbished strategic missile will begin
heading southward. Several minutes later the Titan will place
Coriolis into an egg-shaped orbit that circles the Earth's poles.
Since launch is set for morning twilight, a nice visual display
might occur as the vehicle emerges from the Earth's shadow and
sunlight reflects off of the exhaust. If such a display does take
place, it will probably be during the late portion of the second
stage burn.
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MISSION BACKGROUND
Detailed information about the Coriolis mission is available on the
Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command web site. The URL is:
http://enterprise.spawar.navy.mil/spawarpublicsite/body.cfm
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COUNTDOWN STATUS
The best source of countdown status for the Titan II/Coriolis launch
is the Spaceflight Now web site. Space journalist Justin Ray is now
providing current countdown status on a web page devoted to this
launch. Point your browser to:
http://www.spaceflightnow.com/titan/g4/status.html
On launch day, this page will be updated frequently beginning at about
T-1 hour. Be sure to regularly hit the refresh button on your browser
to see the latest information.
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VANDENBERG LAUNCH NET
Amateur (ham) radio operators in southern California will probably
meet on the air on launch day to hold a Vandenberg Launch Net. This
informal net is used to discuss pending launches and pass along
countdown status. It usually runs from T-30 to T+15 minutes.
The participants primarily use the Broadcast Peak repeater near Santa
Barbara. It has very wide coverage and is a cross-band repeater. In
other words, it simultaneously receives and rebroadcasts signals on
the 2-meter, 220, and 440 amateur radio bands. The output frequencies
are 147.000, 224.900, 449.300 MHz. The offset and PL tone for all
frequencies are minus and 131.8 Hz, respectively.
Since this launch may be visible across a wide area, additional
repeaters may be used for the benefit of those in outlying areas.
These would be the 147.090 MHz Santa Catalina repeater and the Condor
linked repeater system.
Condor is a network of linked repeaters in California and adjoing
areas. Because the repeaters are linked, a ham using one repeater will
be heard on all of the other repeaters in the system. The Condor
repeaters are as follows:
Freq. PL
(MHz) Offset (Hz) Location
------- ------ ----- ----------------
223.840 - 156.7 Victorville
223.940 - 141.3 San Diego
223.940 - 156.7 Thousand Oaks
224.000 - 156.7 Santa Barbara
224.180 - 156.7 Palm Springs
224.640 - 156.7 Lake Isabella
224.720 - 156.7 Gorman
224.820 - 141.3 Lompoc
224.820 - 156.7 Orange County
224.880 - 156.7 Kingman, AZ
224.900 - 156.7 Fresno
224.900 - 156.7 Las Vegas, NV
224.920 - 156.7 San Luis Obispo*
* This repeater may be off the air or disconnected from the system.