Cape Canaveral Air Force Station Launch Complex 17

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Launch Complex 17
The first stage of the Boeing Delta II rocket, which launched NASA's Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO), is lifted into a vertical position for installation into the mobile service tower at Pad 17B
The first stage of the Boeing Delta II rocket, which launched NASA's Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO), is lifted into a vertical position for installation into the mobile service tower at Pad 17B
Launch Site Cape Canaveral Air Force Station
Location 28.446704°N
-80.566022°W
Short name LC-17
Operator US Air Force
Total launches TBC
Launch pads 2
Minimum/Maximum
orbital inclination
28° - 57°
LC-17A Launch History
Status Active
Launches TBC
First launch Thor, 30 August 1957
Last launch Navstar GPS Block IIR-16, 17 November 2006
Associated rockets Delta
Delta II (current)
LC-17B Launch History
Status Active
Launches TBC
First launch Thor, 25 January 1957
Last launch STEREO, 26 October 2006
Associated rockets Delta
Delta II (current)
Delta III

Cape Canaveral Air Force Station Launch Complex 17 is a launch site at Merritt Island, Florida.

It was first built in 1956 for the Thor ballistic missile program, but later was used to launch probes to the Moon and planets, solar observatories and weather satellites.[1]

LC 17 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station features two active expendable launch vehicle (ELV) launch pads, 17-A and 17-B. The pads are run by the US Air Force's 45th Space Wing and have supported more than 300 military, NASA and commercial missile and rocket launches. Pad 17-A supported its first Thor missile launch on August 30, 1957, and Pad 17-B supported its first Thor launch on January 25, 1957. The site was upgraded in the early 1960s to support a variety of more modern Expendable Launch Vehicles, which were derived from the basic Thor booster. The modern ELVs based on Thor came to be called the Delta family of rockets.[1]

Thirty-five early Delta rocket missions were launched from Complex 17 between the beginning of 1960 and the end of 1965. At that time the complex was run by the Air Force. The Air Force transferred Complex 17 to NASA in 1965, but the site was returned to the Air Force in 1988 to support the Delta II program.[1]

As Delta II launches continued over the next decade, Pad 17-B was modified in 1997 to support a new, more powerful launch vehicle, the Delta III. The Delta III made its first successful launch debut on Pad 17-B August 23, 2000.[1]

Among the major NASA missions launched from the complex were the Explorer and Pioneer space probes, all of the Orbiting Solar Observatories, Solar Maximum, Biological Satellites (BIOS), Television Infrared Observations Satellites (TIROS) and Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites (GOES).[1]

These probes and satellites have, among many other things, revealed much about the Moon and our neighboring planets and continue to provide people across the world critical weather information on a daily basis.[1]


[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f NASA - http://www.ksc.nasa.gov/elvnew/messenger/lc17.htm

[edit] See also

[edit] External links


Merritt Island launch sites  v  d  e 
Cape Canaveral Air Force Station (all except LC-39)
Kennedy Space Center (LC-39)
LC-1 | LC-2 | LC-3 | LC-4 | LC-5 | LC-6 | LC-9 | LC-10 | LC-11 | LC-12 | LC-13 | LC-14 | LC-15 | LC-16 | LC-17 | LC-18 | LC-19 | LC-20 | LC-21 | LC-22 | LC-25 | LC-26 | LC-29 | LC-30 | LC-31 | LC-32 | LC-34 | LC-36 | LC-37 | LC-39 | LC-40 | LC-41 | LC-43 | LC-45 | LC-46 | LC-47


Atlantic Missile Range drop zone | Grand Turk Island drop zone | Mobile Launch Area | SLBM Launch Area | Patrick AFB | Shuttle Landing Facility | Cape Canaveral AFS Skid Strip

In other languages