NASA astronaut Don Pettit captured stunning star trails using a long-exposure technique while on the International Space Station in 2012. (NASA/Don Pettit)
NASA's newest communications satellite blasted into space Thursday night, beefing up the network that links ground controllers to the International Space Station and Earth-orbiting research observatories.
The 3.8-ton at 9:33 p.m. EST from Florida's Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, its Atlas 5 rocket lighting up the night sky with bright-orange flame as it climbed toward space.
TDRS-L is the latest addition to NASA's Tracking and Data Relay Satellite network, which enables the nearly continuous transmission of information between mission control and a variety of orbiting research and exploration spacecraft. []
"The TDRS constellation brings back all of the data and video that we see every day from the International Space Station," NASA launch director Tim Dunn said in a statement. "TDRS also supports all of the data from the and all of our low-Earth orbit NASA science missions."
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The TDRS program began taking shape in the early 1970s, as NASA sought a better way to stay in touch with its orbiting spacecraft. At that point, the space agency relied on a system of ground stations, each of which could receive and send data only when a passed nearly overhead.
The first TDRS spacecraft launched in 1983, and NASA has been maintaining and upgrading the system ever since. The roughly $360 million TDRS-L will join eight currently operational satellites in the network, all of which orbit at an altitude of 22,300 miles (35,888 kilometers).
These numbers offer some redundancy for the constellation, which was designed to work with six satellites and one "hot spare," TDRS program officials said.
NASA and its industry contractors have developed three different generations of TDRS satellites over the decades. The first generation included seven spacecraft, which launched between 1983 and 1995, while three second-generation satellites blasted off from 2000 through 2002.
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The third generation also includes three spacecraft, the first of which, TDRS-K, launched in January 2013. The other two in this class are TDRS-L and TDRS-M, which is slated to be ready for liftoff in 2015.
The TDRS constellation has proven its value over the years, NASA officials said. The satellites mostly support NASA missions, but they relay data from spacecraft run by other government agencies as well.
"Not only are we getting global coverage 100 percent of the time, we are getting it in real time," Badri Younes, NASA's deputy associate administrator for space communications and navigation, said in a prelaunch press conference on Tuesday (Jan. 21).
"Without such support, we'd have to live with very limited coverage, around 10 to 15 percent," he added. "No program can be supported at this data rate, and even our ability to respond in real time to emergency would diminish drastically. That's why TDRS has been declared as a national asset."
TDRS-L, which was built by Boeing, will undergo several months of on-orbit checks before being cleared for use and officially handed over to NASA, officials said. While the satellite was designed to last for at least 15 years on orbit, most TDRS spacecraft have lived considerably longer than that.
Follow Mike Wall on Twitter@michaeldwallandGoogle+.Follow us @Spacedotcom, Facebookor Google+. Originally published onSPACE.com.
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NASA astronaut Don Pettit captured stunning star trails using a long-exposure technique while on the International Space Station in 2012. (NASA/Don Pettit)
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