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Wide Field Infrared Explorer

 
Wikipedia: Wide Field Infrared Explorer
Wide Field Infrared Explorer
Wire.jpg
General information
NSSDC ID 1999-011A
Organization NASA
Launch date 5 March 1999
Launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base
Launch vehicle Pegasus XL rocket
Mission length 10 years, 9 months, and 22 days elapsed
Mass 250.0 kg
Website Wide-Field Infrared Explorer

The Wide Field Infrared Explorer (WIRE) is a satellite launched on 5 March 1999 on the Pegasus XL rocket into a polar orbit between 409 km and 426 km above the Earth's surface. WIRE was intended to be a four-month infrared survey of the entire sky, specifically focusing on starburst galaxies and luminous protogalaxies. The science team was based at the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center in Pasadena, California. Flight operations, integration, and testing were from Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland. The telescope and cryo-assembly were built by Space Dynamics Laboratories in Utah.

A design flaw in the spacecraft control electronics caused the telescope dust cover to eject prematurely in its first few hours on-orbit, exposing the telescope to the Earth. In normal operations the telescope would avoid pointing at the Earth as well as the Sun because the heat load was too high for the cryogenic cooling. At this early stage in the mission, the telescope was deliberately pointed at the Earth for safety reasons under the assumption that the dust cover was present. The influx of power into the telescope caused the solid hydrogen cryostat to boil off all of its cryogen. As a result, the cryostat vent, now expelling gas at rates orders of magnitude higher than designed, acted as a tiny thruster rocket overwhelming the attitude control system and ultimately spinning the spacecraft up as high as 60 rpm. After the hydrogen was exhausted, spacecraft engineers were able to re-establish attitude control. However, with the cryogen gone, the science instrument was no longer functional and the original science mission ended.

In order to salvage some functionality from the $73 million spacecraft, operations were redirected after the failure of the cryogen system to an alternate science mission using the undamaged onboard star tracker for long-term monitoring of bright stars in support of an asteroseismology program. This technique aims to measure oscillations in nearby stars to probe their structure. While the star tracker has poor spatial resolution, having been designed primarily for a wide field of view and detection of the brightest stars, it is above the atmosphere and thus avoids scintillation, enabling high-precision photometry. Currently Dr. Derek Buzasi's asteroseismology project is the sole user of the satellite which has been returning data for over 9 years.

As a secondary experiment, one solar array includes a section with reflectors, to test a concentrator system.

The original science goals of WIRE may finally be achieved by the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) mission which was successfully launched into orbit on December 14, 2009 and is currently undergoing check-out.

See also

References


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Wide Field Infrared Explorer" Read more