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On this day – November 1

Posted on November 1, 2024October 16, 2024 By Barb Sande

The events on this day in history for our heritage companies are noted below.

November 1

The earliest event was in 1963, the latest event was in 2023

One milestone event (5 to 65+ years ago)

Human Spaceflight:

1992 – LANDING: STS-52 (Columbia), KSC

1993 – LANDING: STS-58 (Columbia), Edwards AFB

Military and Classified Programs:

1962 – USAF awards a contract worth $173 million to UTC/CSD for continued development of 5-segment solid rocket boosters for the MM Titan III program

2022 – LAUNCH: LM/Terran Orbital LINUSS Chase/RSO nanosats (with multiple other payloads including LDPE-2, Shepherd Demonstration, Alpine, Tetra-1, USA-344), Falcon Heavy FH-004, LC-39A, KSC – Satellite servicing demo missions (LINUSS)

Exploration and Interplanetary Programs:

1994 – LAUNCH: MM (GE/RCA) Wind , Delta 7925-10, LC17B, CCAFS – Solar Wind experiments at L1 point – MILESTONE: 30 years ago

2023 – LM Lucy mission flew by asteroid 152830 Dinkinesh, revealing it to be a binary pair (one year ago)

Earth-Monitoring and Civil Weather Satellite programs:

NONE

Commercial Programs:

NONE

Test, ICBM, FBM programs:

1963 – LAUNCH: MM Titan II, LC15, CCAFS – Test of accumulators to lessen the impact of longitudinal vibrations (POGO); successful test led to adoption of the accumulator mod on Gemini vehicles

1967 – LAUNCH (4): Lockheed Polaris A3, SSBN657, ETR

2003 – LAUNCH: LM Trident D-5, SSBN733, ETR

Other:

NONE

The images today are from two events.  First, there is a photo of Wind’s launch vehicle, a Delta 7925-10, just before launch in 1994 (thirty years ago).  Second, there is an artist’s conception of Wind and its configuration in the L1 orbit. Photo Credits: NASA/Image credit: NASA/GSFC.   Wind was built at the East Windsor facility. 

The global geospace Wind satellite is still operational at L1 as of 11/1/2024, with enough fuel to last until 2070.  Here are the objectives of Wind (from Wikipedia):

  • Provide complete plasma, energetic particle, and magnetic field input for magnetospheric and ionospheric studies.
  • Determine the magnetospheric output to interplanetary space in the up-stream region.
  • Investigate basic plasma processes occurring in the near-Earth solar wind.
  • Provide baseline ecliptic plane observations to be used in heliospheric latitudes by the Ulysses mission.

Since I don’t want this to be really long, I recommend going to the Wikipedia site and find their article on the Wind spacecraft.  The article has a huge list of discoveries.  

Second, there is a photo of the asteroid 152830 Dinkinesh taken by the Lucy spacecraft one year ago. The asteroid was found to be a binary.  Here is the description of the photo (Photo Credit: NASA/Goddard/SwRI/Johns Hopkins APL/NOIRLab):

This image shows the “moonrise” of the satellite as it emerges from behind asteroid Dinkinesh as seen by the Lucy Long-Range Reconnaissance Imager (L’LORRI), one of the most detailed images returned by NASA’s Lucy spacecraft during its flyby of the asteroid binary. This image was taken at 12:55 p.m. EDT (1655 UTC) Nov. 1, 2023, within a minute of closest approach, from a range of approximately 270 miles (430 km). From this perspective, the satellite is behind the primary asteroid. The image has been sharpened and processed to enhance contrast.

November 1 – Delta II on the pad prior to launch of WIND. Photo Credit: NASA.
November 1 – Artist’s conception of the Wind spacecraft in L1 orbit. Image credit: NASA/GSFC
November 1 – Asteroid Dinkinesh is imaged by Lucy and is found to be a binary. Image Credit: NASA.
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