NuSTAR Launch

    Spacecraft: Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array
    Launch Vehicle: Orbital Sciences Pegasus XL
    Launch Date: June 13, 2012
    Launch Time: 12:00:42 p.m. EDT
    Launch Site: Reagan Test Site, Kwajalein Atoll

    Pegasus Successfully Launches NuSTAR
    NASA's NuSTAR spacecraft began its mission following a successful launch aboard an Orbital Sciences' Pegasus XL rocket.

    Stargazer L-1011 carrier aircraft on the runway. Image at right: Orbital Sciences'
    L-1011 carrier aircraft waits on the runway at Kwajalein Atoll as it prepares to take off before launching Orbital's Pegasus XL rocket with NASA's NuSTAR spacecraft aboard. Image credit: NASA TV


    The Pegasus was released from Orbital's "Stargazer" L-1011 carrier aircraft at noon EDT on June 13, or 4 a.m. MHT on June 14 in the drop zone. The aircraft took off one hour before launch from Kawajalein Atoll, a small chain of U-shaped islands in the Pacific Ocean.

    Pegasus XL is launched. Image above: The Stargazer L-1011 carrier aircraft releases the Pegasus rocket with NASA's NuSTAR spacecraft. Image credit: NASA TV
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    The 772-pound NuSTAR will spend at least two years observing high-energy X-rays more closely, in higher resolution, than any space telescope before it. On the electromagnetic spectrum, high-energy X-rays are beyond the scope of visible light and are challenging to detect. NuSTAR's advanced design uses two sets of 133 thin, nested shells of mirrors to capture the X-rays as they bounce off the reflecting surfaces at glancing angles. The expected result is an orbiting observatory that enables astronomers to see the universe in an additional band of light, advancing our understanding of how galaxies form and evolve.

    › NuSTAR/Pegasus XL Summary (287KB PDF)
    › Learn more about NASA's Launch Services Program
    › Pegasus/NuSTAR Launch Preparation Archive

Features

NuSTAR to Open X-ray Eyes on Universe

NASA's Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array

The Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array is to focus its instruments on the high-energy universe.

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Aiming for an Open Window

A Delta II rocket launches with the Suomi NPP spacecraft

Why schedule a rocket launch for the middle of the night, or aim for a liftoff time when weather is unlikely to cooperate? The simplicity of the question belies the complexity of the answer.

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Remote Launch Locations Bring Extra Challenges

Launch controllers on console inside the Mission Director's Center

NASA's Launch Services Program must be able to launch any vehicle, anytime, from anywhere in the world. The Telemetry and Communications Group helps make it happen.

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Special Delivery: The Pegasus XL Rocket

Orbital Sciences Stargazer L-1011 aircraft

The Pegasus XL rocket launches big things in small packages.

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Launch Control Center

Mission Extras