Sixty two minutes after lift-off, Calipso separated from the rocket's second stage. CloudSat followed 35 minutes later. Ground controllers successfully acquired signals from both spacecraft, and initial telemetry reports show both to be in excellent health. Over the next six weeks, system and instrument checks will be performed. The two satellites will eventually circle approximately 705 kilometres above Earth in a sun-synchronous polar orbit.
Expand (549kb, 1366 x 2000) The launch of CloudSat and Calipso satellites from Vandenberg Air Force Base, California. Credit: Boeing/Thom Baur
Each spacecraft will transmit pulses of energy and measure the portion of the pulses scattered back to the satellite. CloudSat's Cloud-Profiling Radar is more than 1,000 times more sensitive than typical weather radar. It can detect clouds and distinguish between cloud particles and precipitation. Calipso's polarisation lidar can detect aerosol particles and distinguish between aerosol and cloud particles. Lidar, similar in principle to radar, uses reflected light to determine the characteristics of the target area. The data can then be rendered into three-dimensional maps of clouds that identify the location and form of water molecules.
The satellites will fly in formation as members of NASA's "A-Train" constellation, which also includes NASA's Aqua and Aura satellites and a French satellite known as Parasol, for Polarisation and Anisotropy of Reflectances for Atmospheric Sciences coupled with Observations from a Lidar. Lidar uses pulses of shorter wave energy - in the infrared and visible part of the spectrum - fired down into the atmosphere to obtain a different, but complementary, set of data from Cloudsat's.
The Cloudsat and Calipso missions have a number of objectives:
* Together, the satellites will provide the first statistics on the vertical structure of clouds. Scientists will be able to see clouds from their tops to their bottoms - like getting a CT scan of clouds from space * Cloudsat and Calipso will give researchers the first indirect but validated estimate of how much clouds and aerosols contribute to the vertical distribution of atmospheric warming * Cloudsat will provide the first global estimates of the percentage of Earth's clouds that produce rain * Cloudsat will afford scientists the first vertically sliced picture of how much water and ice are in Earth's clouds * Cloudsat will provide the first ability to detect snowfall from space * Cloudsat will offer the first estimates of how efficiently the atmosphere produces rain from condensates * Calipso will provide the first statistics on the global vertical distribution of aerosols and aerosol types * Calipso will reveal for the first time how often "sub-visible" cirrus clouds - very thin clouds invisible to the naked eye - occur, and whether they change with the seasons.
T-00:00 Lift-off The Delta 2 rocket's main engine and twin vernier steering thrusters are started moments before launch. The four ground-start strap-on solid rocket motors are ignited at T-0 to begin the mission. T+01:04.7 Ground SRM Burnout The ground-start Alliant TechSystems-built solid rocket motors consume all their propellant and burn out. T+01:22.5 Jettison Ground SRMs The spent solid rocket boosters are jettisoned to fall into the Pacific Ocean. The spent casings remained attached until the vehicle passed into preset drop zone, clear of offshore oil platforms. T+04:26.4 Main Engine Cutoff After consuming its RP-1 fuel and liquid oxygen, the Rocketdyne RS-27A first stage main engine is shut down. The vernier engines cut off moments later. T+04:35.0 Stage Separation The Delta rocket's first stage is separated now, having completed its job. The spent stage will fall into the Pacific Ocean. T+04:40.5 Second Stage Ignition With the stage jettisoned, the rocket's second stage takes over. The Aerojet AJ118-K liquid-fuelled engine ignites for the first of two firings needed to place the CALIPSO and CloudSat spacecraft into the proper orbit. T+04:45.0 Jettison Payload Fairing The 10-foot diameter payload fairing that protected the satellites atop the Delta 2 during the atmospheric ascent is jettisoned is two halves. T+11:15.2 Second Stage Cut-off 1 The second stage engine shuts down to complete its first firing of the launch. The rocket and attached CALIPSO and CloudSat spacecraft spacecraft are now in a long coast period before the second stage re-ignites. The orbit achieved should be 434 miles at apogee, 115 miles at perigee and inclined 98.08 degrees. T+59:59.5 Second Stage Restart Delta's second stage engine re-ignites for a short firing to raise the orbit's perigee. T+60:11.6 Second Stage Cutoff 2 The second stage shuts down after a 12-second burst. The orbit achieved should be 436 miles at apogee, 427 miles at perigee and inclined 98.2 degrees. T+62:24.0 CALIPSO Separation The joint U.S. and French Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observations (CALIPSO) spacecraft is released from the Delta 2 rocket. T+95:19.0 DPAF Jettison the Dual Payload Attach Fitting -- the barrel-like structure that supported CALIPSO during launch and enclosed CloudSat -- is opened up by jettisoning the top portion. T+96:39.0 CloudSat Separation NASA's CloudSat spacecraft is released from the Delta 2 rocket to complete the launch.