Courtesy of www.nasa.gov. Launch of MMS on the Atlas V |
This past March, I had the opportunity while visiting Florida to go to Cape Canaveral and watch a launch of a NASA satellite for The Magnetospheric Multiscale Mission (MMS). This is actually a set of four satellites, launched together, which will fly in formation and take measurements of the Earth's magnetosphere. Yeah, I never heard of it either until I found out about the launch. The MMS was launched on a United Launch Alliance Atlas-V 400-series rocket.
Logistics
I had a trip planned to the central Florida area this March, and since I have been several times before to the area, but never during a real launch I was excited to find out that there was indeed a scheduled launch during my trip. I initially just used the Kennedy Space Center (the tourist site company) website, which lists upcoming scheduled launches, and found the post for an Atlas V launch
When:
March 12, 10:44 pm
Where:
SLC-41, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station
Kennedy Space Center
Rocket Launch: Atlas V | Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS)Kennedy Space Center
At some point I've subscribed to a Kennedy Space Center "Launch Alert" mailing list, although this particular launch wasn't one that I got an email for. This was probably due to the scheduled time, at 10:44 pm, the official Kennedy Space Center visitor center is closed. I called the day before to the KSC's main number and left a voice message asking if they still had any sort of ticket available to view the launches at night, they did not respond.
After reading a number of other sites with viewing advice for launches, we decided to wing it by going to Cape Canaveral and looking for one of the public viewing areas outside the actual NASA / U.S. Air Force base in the town of Port Canaveral or some of the other nearby state parks. According to launchphotography.com:
For off-hours/night launches, when no tickets are being sold by the Visitor Complex and Playalinda Beach is closed,Armed with this minimal information we headed off to view the launch!
the best option for Atlas 5 launches is Port Canaveral on Route 401, at 11.7 miles from the pad. In that case it is the furthest viewing of any rocket.
Night of the Launch
After double-checking the weather reports, the launch appeared to be on schedule. We drove the hour or so to Cape Canaveral in the early evening, the sun was still up and went to get dinner. I think we ate here, which was unremarkable, except for the fact that nearly everyone in there were "space launch groupies" all going to the same launch afterwards. At the table next to us was a couple who apparently had connections to access the base. They were kind enough to suggest we take a look at spaceflightnow.com as the best place to get real-time info on the upcomming launches. After eating our dinner, we drove over to try to get a spot along Rt. 401 which faces the launch pad for Atlas Vs to the North, across an open body of water called the Banana River.Map of Rt. 401 where we watched the launch |
After we parked we had two hours to wait. A lot of people were setting up large cameras with zoom lenses on tripods. Since the only people there are the people who drove and were able to park in that area, it wasn't particularly crowded at all, but you had neighbors to your right and left at all times. We sat on the grass in a spot with a good direct view at the rocket on the pad, preparing for launch. From our smart phones, we caught the NASA TV live stream which was mostly just a video of the rocket from close up. Occasionally there would be a feed of some talk of the mission controllers asking for a status check on some system. Things like this were often heard during the hours before the countdown: "The Centaur liquid oxygen pad storage area has been prepped. The next step is conditioning the transfer lines, which is now beginning to prepare the plumbing for flowing the cryogenic oxidizer."
The worst part of this experience was the wait. Right offshore in the shallow water, parallel to the road were some high power lines, which made an incredible loud electrical buzzing the entire time. There were also police patrol cars going up and down the rows of cars along the street, with their lights flashing. The two combined in the most awful synergy to probably qualify as a form of torture in most of the developed world. We spent the next hour listening to updates on my phone, while taking looks at the rocket and the Vehicle Assembly Building which was also nicely lit, and perfectly visible using my binoculars.
Pictures of the Rocket
Here were some pictures we managed to take. It was dark, and my camera isn't meant for this. My camera is a Sony Cybershot with 20x optical zoom. These were all taken during the fueling stage.Landscape of the Cape Canaveral base. The Atlas V launch is at center. The VAB is on the left and well lit. |
The clearest shot with full zoom |
Another zoomed shot of the Atlas V on the launch pad |