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by Staff Writers Paris (ESA) Aug 22, 2014
Lift-off for Galileo satellites 5 and 6 is set for Thursday, 21 August, at 12:31 GMT (14:31 CEST) on a Soyuz rocket from the Guiana Space Centre, French Guiana. Just 9 minutes and 23 seconds later, the Fregat upper stage carrying the payload will separate from the Soyuz third stage, and conduct a pair of engine burns separated by an approximately three-hour ballistic coast phase. Three hours and 47 minutes after launch, the Galileo satellites will separate into free-flight orbit, 23 522 km above Earth. On board each satellite, an automatic sequence will be triggered, switching the spacecraft on, booting up the onboard software, deploying a pair of solar arrays and orienting the spacecraft toward the Sun. Separation also marks the start of the critical launch and early orbit phase (LEOP) for the joint ESA/CNES (French space agency) mission operations team at ESOC, ESA's control centre in Darmstadt.
Watching for a call home "For this critical period, we'll rely on the expertise of the CNES Network Operations Centre, which operates the ground station." The team expects to receive the first telemetry - spacecraft status data - just two minutes after separation. "If all looks OK, we can start checking out the spacecraft systems and status right away," adds Herve.
'CNESOC' blends expertise Under the lead of the flight directors, some 15 engineers from CNES have been working with a similar number of ESA experts as part of a single team for Thursday's launch, which caps many weeks of intensive simulation training at ESOC. The same team also oversaw the first two Galileo launches, with those LEOPs being conducted from CNES's control centre in Toulouse. In the future, the same team will conduct LEOPs alternately from Darmstadt and Toulouse. "We call ourselves the 'CNESOC' team, but this somewhat humorous acronym accurately reflects the fact that personnel from the two agencies have created a truly blended, capable operations team that is helping make Europe's Galileo system a reality," says Jeremie. Herve agrees, adding, "On our team, we have engineers from either Agency sharing duties in each of the specialist areas, from Flight Director or Spacecraft Operations Engineers to Flight Dynamics; this allows us to alternate LEOP teams between the two launch centres and have full redundancy. It really is one team."
Cooperation continues after LEOP Then, the two spacecraft will be handed over to the Galileo Control Centre in Oberpfaffenhofen, for routine operations, and ESA's Redu Centre in Belgium, for detailed payload testing. Even after handover, the flight dynamics specialists on the combined ESA/CNES team will continue providing accurate orbit determinations and computing orbit manoeuvres to position the satellites in their final target slots. "This is a further example of cooperation between European space control centres," agreed both Herve and Jeremie.
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