Communications Glitch and Weather Postpone DART Launch

NASA postponed today's launch of the Demonstration of Autonomous Rendezvous Technology (DART) spacecraft because the target satellite, Multiple Paths, Beyond-Line-of-Sight Communications, had a temporary loss of Global Positioning Satellite (GPS) reception that could have impacted the navigation accuracy for the planned on-orbit rendezvous between the two craft.

Launch officials said Monday that there was a 90 percent chanceweather violations could scrub today's launch of DART, a spacecraft designed to seek out andrendezvous with a satellite in Earth orbit. If successful, DART's flight could prove key technologies developed by NASA to build autonomous, rendezvous-ready spacecraft.

DART is expected to launch from the air atop a four-stage Orbital Sciences Pegasus XL rocket in a flight stagedfrom California's Vandenberg Air Force Base. A former passenger jet, StargazerL-1011, will carry the rocket into launch position 40,000 feet (12,192 meters) abovethe Pacific Ocean.

While DART's launch marks the first flight of a U.S.-builtunmanned rendezvous space vehicle, though the Russian Federal Space Agency'sProgress and Soyuz vehicles have docked autonomously with space stations foryears. Europe is also planning to launch the cargo ship Jules Verne, the firstof its Automated Transfer Vehicles (ATV) to the International Space Stationnext year.

GPS is used to aid DART's rendezvous, and onboard software will test collision avoidance maneuvers, and direct the spacecraft to fly circles around MUBLCOM. An onboard camera will hopefully catch images of the rendezvous.

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Space.com Staff
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