Jet Propulsion Laboratory JPL Earth JPL Solar System JPL Stars and Galaxies JPL Science and Technology MSL Home NASA Home Page Jet Propulsion Laboratory California Institute of Technology Follow this link to skip to the main content
NASA logo, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology header separator
+ NASA Homepage
+ NASA en Español
+ Marte en Español
GO!
Mars Science Laboratory Banner
Overview Science Technology The Mission People Features Events Multimedia
Mars for Kids
Mars for Students
Mars for Educators
Mars for Press
+ Mars Home
+ MSL Home

The Mission
Summary
Rover Update
Mission Team
Launch Vehicle
Spacecraft
Mission Timeline
bullet Summary
bullet Pre-launch Activities
bullet Launch
bullet Cruise
bullet Approach
bullet Entry, Descent,
and Landing
bullet First Drive
bullet Surface Operations
Communications With Earth
Mission Timeline: Launch
horizontal line

The launch phase begins when the spacecraft transfers to internal power on the launch pad and ends when the spacecraft is declared stable, healthy, and ready to accept commands and the launch telemetry has been played back. The launch telemetry tells engineers exactly what happened during the launch.

The primary Mars Science Laboratory launch/arrival period is scheduled to extend from September 15 through October 4, 2009. The corresponding arrival period would begin on July 10, 2010 and would last until September 14, 2010.

The planned primary launch/arrival period was chosen based on the availability of the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO) and direct-to-Earth (DTE) entry, descent, and landing communication strategies.

Launch Day Launch Date Arrival Day Arrival Date
1 September 15, 2009 Earliest July 10, 2010
1 September 15, 2009 Latest September 14, 2010
20 October 4, 2009 Earliest July 16, 2010
20 October 4, 2009 Latest September 14, 2010

The Mars Science Laboratory launch strategy will provide for a launch window of extended duration in order to accommodate any minor hardware problems, short-term weather delays at the launch pad, and launch holds caused by potential collisions with objects in Earth orbit. The specifics of the daily launch windows for the Mars Science Laboratory, which will fly on an ATLAS V 541 launch vehicle, are now being analyzed.

The major activities in this mission phase include:

  • the liftoff and boost phase of the launch;
  • insertion into a circular parking orbit;
  • a coast period followed by additional launch vehicle burns necessary to inject the spacecraft onto a trajectory to Mars;
  • separation of the spacecraft from the launch vehicle;
  • initial acquisition by the Deep Space Network;
  • verification of the initial spacecraft health and operating conditions; and,
  • the verified execution of a minimal set of post-launch commands.
Credits Feedback Related Links Sitemap
USA Gov
National Aeronautics and Space Administration