NASA EDDGE: GOES-S Live Rollout Show 27:58 00:00 Roll out is poised to begin where the 00:04 Atlas 5 will be transporting the GOES-S 00:07 spacecraft to Space Launch Complex 41. 00:09 You're watching NASA edge 00:12 [Music] 00:46 Welcome to NASA EDGE an inside and 00:49 outside look at all things NASA. You know 00:50 rollout has begun Franklin. It's very 00:53 exciting, the weather is good, a little 00:54 windy yes but you know it's 15 months 00:57 ago we were here for the GOES-R launch. 01:00 Today getting ready rollout for GOES-S 01:03 launch tomorrow 01:04 pretty exciting. Yes right now GOES-S 01:06 will join its sibling in orbit and now 01:09 the meteorologists and people who 01:12 need this type of information will be 01:14 able to see not only from the east coast 01:18 of Africa through the middle of the 01:19 United States but from the middle of in 01:21 the United States over to New Zealand so 01:22 more coverage more high definite 01:26 definition imagery yeah you know it's 01:28 interesting it's kind of like you 01:29 mentioned siblings they're kind of like 01:31 the Wonder Twins of satellites 01:32 absolutely and coming up in 2019 and 01:35 2023 will have a GOES-U and T but 01:39 we'll talk about that a little bit later 01:41 on yeah and you know so it's interesting 01:43 because before we get into the details 01:46 of what's going on with the GOES-S 01:47 satellite we had an opportunity or 01:49 chris had an opportunity to sit down 01:51 with Sandra Smalley from NASA 01:52 headquarters to talk about the important 01:55 partnership between NASA and NOAA 01:57 especially related to these two 01:59 satellites let's check it out we're here 02:01 with Sandra Smalley the director of the 02:03 Joint Agency Satellite Division how you 02:04 doing Sandra I'm doing great how are you 02:06 today pretty good now as director what 02:08 is your role within the division okay so 02:10 my division is within the science 02:13 Mission Directorate at NASA headquarters 02:14 and we bring to bear in NASA's expertise 02:16 in building space flight and ground 02:18 systems leveraging our expertise in 02:20 science engineering program project 02:23 management so looking at GOES-S how does 02:25 your Directorate play key role in the 02:27 success of GOES-S? so for GOES-S. GOES-S 02:30 is the second in our series of geostationary satellites that we're 02:33 building on behalf of NOAA we build them, 02:36 we test them, we launch them, and then we 02:38 do the on-orbit checkout and then we 02:39 hand them over to NOAA for operations. 02:41 GOES-S is particularly exciting because 02:43 it's going to provide the second in this 02:46 revolutionary series of satellites which 02:48 has upgraded the capability for our 02:52 weather services and emergency response tremendously 02:55 from the previous series.Now I like this 02:58 partnership between NASA so does that 02:59 start with your division? So it is an 03:02 interesting partnership so when you look 03:04 at actually designing a new series of 03:08 missions that can take a couple of 03:10 decades. When you start off with an 03:11 initial concept you're developing new 03:13 technologies; you're deciding what 03:15 instruments need to be built for it and 03:17 then you you know start the whole 03:18 acquisition or procurement process.So 03:20 what NASA does is we oversee the 03:22 procurement process in support of our 03:25 partner organizations and meeting their 03:27 objectives. And then also with this GOES-R system I mean not just with GOES-S 03:31 but we have goes U and T down the 03:33 road; I mean it's such a long program is 03:35 I mean what's the challenge for you as a 03:37 director to make sure that you know not only 03:39 there's just money for those programs 03:41 down the road but that you know we we 03:42 have that operational capability over the 03:44 long haul. So it is NOAA's responsibility 03:47 to make sure that the operational 03:48 capability is in place that is their 03:50 charter.Hhowever I mean as a partner to 03:53 them we want to make sure that they have 03:56 you know good estimates. For example when 03:58 you're designing and building a system 04:00 so that they can plan out their budget 04:02 requirements and make sure that they're 04:04 laying out the plans that are necessary 04:07 to actually deliver these systems and 04:09 operate them to meet the the needs of 04:11 their organization - actually the needs of 04:12 all of us on a day to day basis. What's 04:14 the one cool part about the GOES-R 04:18 satellite system that you take away? Yeah 04:21 that is a really tough question to 04:22 answer. I don't think there is just one 04:25 cool part there are so many cool parts 04:26 about the entire system. I mean 04:29 everything from the Advanced bBaseline 04:31 Imager giving you this amazing imagery 04:33 where you can see the weather systems 04:35 develop; the global lightning mapper 04:37 where you can see the lightning as it 04:39 develops within the storms; being able to 04:41 see the whole solar instrumentation see 04:44 the solar flares and understand the in 04:47 situ type measurement so that we can 04:49 understand what kind of radiation and 04:51 all impacts might impact our spacecraft 04:52 orbiting the Earth as well as 04:54 communication systems. It's across the 04:57 board - I don't think I can pick one but 04:59 it's pretty impressive across the board. 05:03 You know Franklin it's amazing just to 05:05 think about all the different 05:07 technologies that are being employed in 05:09 these space set in these satellites that 05:12 are gonna help with weather forecasting 05:14 and emergency responding but what's 05:16 fascinating is through a partnership 05:18 with NOAA we've actually understood that 05:20 through the there are some of their 05:22 subject matter experts they're 05:25 actually developing products from this 05:26 data. they're actually the ones finding 05:28 out how to take that data and put it in 05:30 a usable form for those weather 05:32 forecasters and emergency responders. 05:34 Yeah Blair right now with the goals are 05:36 and continue with go what GOES-S there are 05:38 over 30 products right now already 05:40 available and there are many more that 05:43 are being developed that will be useful 05:45 to people all over the world. 05:47 yeah and it's it's kind of like I don't 05:49 know if there's a good analogy or not 05:50 that it's kind of like they're creating 05:51 like the the weather data app store. 05:53 Absolutely you know you know someone can 05:56 say you know I need a solution to this 05:59 problem and when it comes to weather and 06:01 prediction they just might find it in 06:03 the GOES-S satellite. Yeah and that's 06:05 what's really cool because through this 06:07 partnership where you're seeing this 06:08 kind of tandem action between the 06:10 technology and the data and how you get 06:14 it out there and put it in the hands of 06:16 people that need to use it. So we had a 06:19 chance actually to talk more about this 06:21 technology with EDG Grigsby when Chris had a 06:24 chance to sit down with with him at NASA 06:26 Goddard Space Flight Center. Let's check 06:28 it out. We're here with Ed Grigsby who is 06:30 the deputy system program director for 06:32 the GOES-R Series. How're you doing Ed? I'm doing 06:34 excellent thank you. I was doing some 0 research and you have four key areas 06:38 that I see for the GOES system. One of course 06:41 being the visible imagery and infrared 06:43 tell us what about what you're going to 06:46 be looking at with the satellites. So 06:48 you're very familiar with the GOES. GOES-R 06:51 launched in November 16 turned 06:53 into GOES-16 I think about six months 06:56 after we launched it. That's that's our 06:58 post launch test period. You've seen the 07:01 tremendous impact GOES-16 has you 07:05 watch the news every night you see those 07:07 pictures already in operations so the 07:10 ABI instrument obviously from the 07:12 previous GOES generation five times 07:15 faster 07:16 four times more resolution and three 07:18 times the spectral content which means a 07:21 whole host of products never before seen. 07:24 Right the GOES-R Series, one of the 07:25 things that really interested me and I 07:27 had a chance to interview Greg Mandt from 07:28 GOES-R when we did the show and he was 07:30 fascinated by this lightning mapping 07:33 instrument tell us a little. So GLM yeah yeah I 07:36 heard something the other day that just 07:38 astounded me. Since we launched and 07:40 started viewing the earth with GLM we've 07:43 counted over thirteen billion thirteen 07:47 billion billion? strikes on Earth. So just 07:51 like that GOES-17/GOES-S will 07:54 launch and become seventeen - it will have a 07:56 GLM identical and it's going to view the 07:58 east coast of Africa all the way to New 08:00 Zealand and Alaska will be able to see 08:03 lightning strikes. And its tremendous 08:06 potential is incredible. iI sees in cloud 08:09 and cloud to ground lightning which is a 08:12 real precursor to some of the most 08:13 severe weather. Right so the fact that 08:15 you're able to see that lightning almost 08:18 just as it's happening right I mean you 08:20 can allow those forecasters and 08:22 meteorologist to providers or early 08:24 warnings much much sooner. 08:25 Oh yeah yes yes there you know 08:27 there been some projections but it will 0 it will be incredible. That's just on the 08:34 on the looking at the earth but yeah you 08:36 have another half of the mission that's 08:37 looking behind looking at the sun. We do. 08:40 yeah tell us a bit about that. So we 08:42 have several instruments that are on a 08:44 solar pointing platform that look 08:46 directly at the sun. SUVI, SUVI takes 08:49 images of the sun and we get to see in 08:52 several wave bands what the sun's look 08:54 like what the kind of mass ejections 08:56 what kind of heavy protons are coming. 08:59 with the SEISS instrument right there's 09:00 EXIS which is extreme UV. On the end 09:04 of a boom we have a magnetometer 09:06 which is providing some of the magneto 09:09 spheric data that's required to really 09:11 tell what kind of problems we may have 09:14 with aviation or ground power. All right 09:17 so I guess you an important question now 09:19 okay okay a big important question as 09:21 you said before with GOES-16 we're getting 09:24 back a lot of great data and we're 09:25 seeing that. In fact we had a chance to 09:27 see that when we had the the recent 09:28 snowstorm 09:29 on the East Coast were able to see the GOES-16 09:31 imagery which was fascinating to see 09:34 that in real-time. What has been your 09:36 most intriguing or interesting part 09:39 about the GOES-R Series? Yeah you got 09:42 a top 5? What I have a top one. 09:44 Oh there we go. So when we're at the Cape 09:47 and we launched GOES-R you know I I I did say the GOES-R Series is going to save 09:53 lives and it does. For instance during 09:57 hurricane Maria when it hit landfall 09:59 okay the the radar system went out. There 10:03 was no data there was no information 10:05 that emergency managers could use to 10:07 provide any type of emergency help. GOES-16 10:13 was there during hurricane Harvey they 10:16 used to GOES-16 to actually track the eye 10:19 of the storm right so there were there 10:21 were 200 people trapped during that 10:24 hurricane they used the the tracking 10:27 from GOES-16 to actually tell the 10:30 emergency managers when to go in and 10:32 rescue those 200 people. That it saves 10:34 lives. That's amazing and now we're gonna 10:36 have the benefit of the west coast 10:38 getting that.Tthat's right that feature 10:39 now that's right especially with 10:40 wildfires in California - oh it's amazing 10:42 the the amount of you know wildfires 10:45 have devastated areas that are prone to 10:48 mudslides so the amount of rainfall the 10:51 amount of precipitation the view that 10:53 GOES-17 will provide is going to 10:55 increase their capability one hundred 10:58 percent. One thing that is incredibly 11:01 important is that we found with our 11:03 infrared imagery that we can see some of 11:07 the early initiations of wildfires even 11:10 before the 911 calls come in. That's 11:12 amazing. Yeah that's incredible. 11:13 I am joined here onset by Mike Stringer 11:18 from NOAA .Mike tell us tell me a little 11:22 bit about the instruments on the GOES-S 11:24 and how they will help to forecast 11:27 the weather coming across the Pacific 11:29 and how it will impact people on the west 11:31 coast. Good morning Franklin it's great to be 11:34 here on this day with when the 11:36 satellite's rolling out to the launch pad 11:38 and we're so excited you know the 11:40 instruments are going to help us see 11:41 clearer, faster in 11:43 with more different spectrum and putting 11:47 that different spectrum together they 11:49 can see the moisture in the atmosphere 11:51 and so looking off of the at the Pacific 11:55 they can watch these atmospheric rivers 11:57 that come in that cause flooding in 12:00 California and so they could really 12:03 watch that and see that and see it and 12:05 be able to predict that better. As well 12:08 as with the clearer images we'll be able 12:10 to see things in Alaska. One of the 12:13 things that we've noticed with GOES-16 12:15 is the ability to see ice floes in the 12:18 Hudson so now we'll be able to see ice 12:21 floes up around Alaska and then of 12:24 course we'll be able to see the Hawaiian 12:27 Islands really well and be able to get 12:29 accurate prediction for them and in 12:30 typhoons and stuff that might be coming 12:33 through that are gonna affect their 12:34 weather. That's very interesting. 12:36 Now looking at the west coast and how 12:39 weather affects people there tell me 12:43 a little bit about fog detection and 12:46 what that does for air traffic 12:47 controllers and controlling flights in 12:51 and up and down the west coast. So with 12:54 our higher temporal resolution and the 12:56 spectral resolution we can see that fog 12:59 we can see it forming and we can also 13:01 see it dissipating. One of the things 13:04 they did is in San Francisco 13:06 while 16 was in its checkout period they 13:10 were able to see the fog dissipating and 13:12 earlier release aircraft that were 13:15 being held and it saved about a hundred 13:18 thousand dollars for the airlines and be 13:21 able to get those aircraft going so 13:24 being able to see that vapor and watch 13:27 it clearly is really helping the 13:29 aviation folks. Now keeping my focus on 13:32 the west coast one of the issues that 13:35 people along the West Coast have every 13:38 year is wildfires and I know there is 13:41 smoke and fire detection on GOES-S. How 13:45 can that help 13:47 with you know saving lives and people on 13:50 the west coast? Right so again with our 13:52 our increased resolution and our 13:55 detection we're able to see the the 13:58 fires a lot of times before even 911 is 14:02 report getting calls reporting it so 14:05 we're able to see smaller fires and not 14:07 as hot a fire as with the older versions 14:10 so they're able to see that fire getting 14:12 started; get the team out there quicker 14:14 and then we're able to watch what's 14:16 going on with the wind and the flow of 14:17 the smoke to protect the firefighters. 14:20 They don't want to be on the south edge 14:22 of the fire if the winds turning and 14:24 going to blow the fire at them so this 14:27 information will be able to help them 14:28 fight the fires better. Tell me a little 14:30 bit about the instruments on GOES-S 14:33 and how they're going to be used to 14:36 develop future products for people to 14:38 use. So the ABI or the Advanced Baseline 14:42 Imager with its you know three times the 14:45 spectrum allows us to see in so many 14:48 different spectrum that we're able to 14:50 combine those spectrum together to 14:52 detect detect volcanic ash and dust and 14:56 we have a 34 products that are being 14:59 produced with the the current spacecraft 15:02 and the current data but the scientists 15:04 are continually looking at how can they 15:06 combine those spectrum in different ways 15:09 to detect different things and be able 15:11 to give you know new information to the 15:14 public for safety. Hey Mike thank you for 15:18 being on with us today we're looking for 15:20 a successful rollout of the GOES-S over 15:23 at the pad and right now we're about to 15:25 go to an interview I did with Pam 15:26 Sullivan over at the Goddard Space 15:29 Flight Center. She's going to talk about 15:31 the instruments that they developed and 15:33 put on the GOES-S satellite. I'm here at 15:35 the Goddard Space Flight Center today 15:37 talking to Pam Sullivan who's the GOES-R 15:39 Series flight project manager. Hi Pam 15:42 how you doing? I'm doing well. Exactly 15:44 what do you do as the flight project 15:46 manager? As flight project manager I'm 15:48 responsible to build the satellites and 15:50 that includes the spacecraft the 15:52 instruments. I work with the Kennedy 15:54 Space Center to get them launched and we 15:56 also have the operations team that turns 15:58 them on and gets everything working 16:00 before we 16:00 hand the satellite over to NOAA for 16:02 operation. But before you can build them 16:05 you have to know what you're going to be 16:06 building and you get that information 16:08 from NOAA. Ya know uh you know they do 16:10 the forecasts and so they collect all 16:13 their scientists and they say what 16:14 observations do you need and for example 16:17 for the GOES-R Series? They said we 16:19 need a lightning mapper - the first time 16:20 they've had that operationally in space. 16:22 So they asked us to design a lightning 16:24 mapper and for a camera like the main 16:26 camera that takes pictures of hurricanes 16:29 and all the weather on earth. They said 16:30 that needs to go way faster and needs to 16:32 have higher resolution and more spectral 16:35 channels. It needs to see in more colors 16:36 than we've had before. So they give us 16:39 those requirements and then the flight 16:40 project is responsible to go out and get 16:42 those those instruments built for them. 16:44 Now this is a big improvement over the 16:46 last series of GOES satellites. A huge 16:48 improvement yeah the instruments that 16:50 are on the GOES-R Series are the same 16:54 overall for satellites right all four of 16:57 the satellites will carry the same 16:58 instrument payload. The first one is a 17:00 huge upgrade but then it's you know it 17:03 takes a while to get that into operation 17:05 and for the forecasters to actually 17:06 understand what all these new 17:07 capabilities do for them and to fully be 17:09 able to utilize that. They also have to 17:12 tune all their tools a lot of the 17:13 software on the ground has to change as 17:14 well because we've got so much more data 17:16 and so many more capabilities so it 17:18 takes that whole process a couple of 17:20 years to catch up. As well the managing 17:22 these satellites and getting them into 17:25 orbit tell me a little bit about the 17:27 GOES-R, S, the T and U; you how they're 17:31 spaced out and how they're used. So GOES 17:33 R we launched in November 2016 that 17:35 was after a development period that 17:38 really started in 1999 give or take so a 17:41 very long period of time to get to that 17:42 first one launching in 2016. We checked 17:45 that one out we did about a six month 17:47 orbit check out and then the scientists 17:49 had another six months where they were 17:51 understanding the products and then just 17:53 recently in late 2017 that satellite got 17:56 moved over to the East Coast where it's 17:59 currently in the GOES East doing 18:01 operational forecasting right now yes 18:03 it's doing a great job and everybody 18:04 loves it so much so that the West Coast 18:07 guys feel like they're being dissed so 18:09 we need to get them GOES-S. Once it's in 18:11 place we'll have full coverage between the east and the west satellite will 18:15 actually be able to see all the way from 18:17 like the coast of Africa all the way 18:20 across the Atlantic. Those satellites can 18:22 see the conus continental United States 18:24 and then the GOES West satellite can 18:26 actually see all the way across the 18:28 Pacific to New Zealand. So you know we'll 18:30 be able to see in the Atlantic GOES East 18:32 will see the Hurricanes that really 18:33 start off the coast of Africa and come 18:35 across the Atlantic and can hit us there. 18:37 But most of you know the weather that 18:38 affects us usually moves from west to 18:41 east so GOES West will have an important 18:42 job seeing everything that starts in the 18:44 Pacific and is moving west to east so 18:47 between the two of them we've got you 18:48 know great coverage for things that are 18:50 coming from any direction towards 18:51 towards the US. But GOES-t. GOES-T. Tell me 18:56 about that. So so that is in development 18:58 as well we've actually got all the 19:01 instruments built for that and almost 19:03 all of them have been delivered to the 19:05 spacecraft out at Lockheed in Denver and 19:07 then GOES-T we'll be getting ready to 19:09 launch that in the middle of 2020. 19:11 Assuming you know the GOES East and GOES West 19:13 satellites are still ok, GOES-T will go 19:15 up and it will actually become an 19:16 on-orbit spare. Just sitting in orbit? 19:19 Just sitting on orbit, yep. And if need be 19:21 you could go east or west? Yep. Okay and then 19:24 GOES-U is also being built because it's 19:26 convenient once we've got the team 19:27 together and they know how to build them 19:28 we'll just keep building them. GOES-U 19:31 we're not planning to launch until 2024 19:33 but it'll be built up and sitting in 19:36 storage for a couple of years and then 19:38 in 2024 we'll get that one launched. 19:40 As the flight project manager for the GOES 19:44 R Series of satellites what is that 19:46 the big payoff that you look for after 19:49 launch? One of the most rewarding moments 19:52 a very specific moment was on after we 19:55 launched GOES-R and got it to geostationary orbit there's the moment we 20:00 call first light and that's where you 20:01 open the door typically the instruments 20:04 are looking at earth and it has taken 20:06 its first picture of Earth you know and 20:08 for me that you know it's more important 20:10 than the launch because that's when you 20:12 know the satellite's working, it's doing 20:13 its job and and the way the ABI works 20:16 we get like a swath of data and it's it 20:18 just you know came down and you see the 20:19 top of the earth and you see the next 20:21 piece in the next piece and you know I 20:24 was one of maybe a dozen people that was 20:26 in the control room when that was 20:27 and everybody there knew that we were 20:30 seeing you know the dawn of a new age of 20:32 forecasting you know what this 20:33 instrument was going to be able to do 20:35 for forecasters never been done before 20:37 and we were the first ones to see it in 20:39 action. You know Franklin it has to be 20:43 a very special moment for the all these 20:46 people that have worked on GOES-S, GOES-R 20:48 when things actually become operational 20:51 and and and go live if you will but I'm 20:54 wondering as we think about all the 20:56 things that we've discussed today. What 20:58 is your favorite feature on the GOES-R 21:01 series so far from your your perspective? 21:03 Well I talked about it briefly with Mike 21:06 Stringer and it's one thing that will 21:08 impact people I think a lot on the west 21:11 coast and that is to smoke and fire 21:12 detection. Wildfires have ravaged the 21:16 west coast over the years so I think 21:18 this will really really help them a lot. 21:19 That ice floe thing was kind of 21:21 interesting as well you know I said I 21:23 never thought about the ice side. Well 21:24 for me I'm looking at the space weather 21:26 side for me what's interesting is we 21:28 learn all about these new weather 21:30 patterns to think about how the sun 21:32 might be playing a role in those weather 21:35 systems is really pretty impressive well 21:38 one thing. Franklin here we're here 21:40 for the rollout today and things are 21:41 busy out at the pad they're actually 21:44 making the rocket is making its way out 21:46 to Space Launch Complex 41 and we're 21:48 gonna go talk to our friends tiffany and 21:51 Mick Woltman to find out what's 21:53 happening with the Atlas 5 Tiffany. 21:56 That's correct where we are at complex 21:58 41 and rollout is happening right now it 22:01 is right there and what an impressive 22:03 sight like it is this is impressive to 22:06 see this Atlas 5 541 here with the GOES- 22:08 S satellite on top I mean I never get 22:11 tired of this. It's a great shot that we're 22:13 getting to see here Tiffany what I want 22:14 to know is this is your first time out 22:16 for roll it's my first time being this 22:19 close and will we have to thank ULA 22:21 for allowing NASA Edge and us this 22:23 access. I mean this is phenomenal. I my 22:26 job is so cool. Right now yeah this this 22:28 is great just to see this thing rolling 22:30 and I'm hoping everybody's gonna need to 22:31 see us roll by here as we finish up so 22:33 let's talk about rollout. Let's break 22:35 down what is happening and where we are 22:37 now with the rollout. So rollout started 22:40 about 10 a.m. this morning. 22:41 ULA came in the team came in and 22:43 reconfigured the VIF to be able to make 22:45 room for the mobile launch platform and 22:47 get the thing ready they hooked up the 22:49 environmental control system and the P 22:52 van which is the control van that feeds 22:54 back to the launch control center once 22:55 they get that out here to launch complex 22:58 41 and yeah they just a great work and 23:01 they started right on time and we're 23:03 moving you know it's about a eighteen 23:04 hundred foot trip takes about thirty 23:07 minutes. They're traveling about a half a 23:09 mile an hour with this rocket taking it 23:11 very easy but as you said earlier it's 23:13 an impressive sight to see this coming 23:15 by right now this is amazing people. 23:17 Let's talk about the configuration of 23:20 the five four one break that down what 23:22 that means. 23:23 So yeah GOES-S is using an atlas v 541 23:26 configuration and what that means in the 23:28 vehicle is the v stands for the five 23:30 meter fairing that encompasses the GOES-S satellite the four is the four solid 23:34 rocket boosters that we have on the 23:36 first stage and they give us just a 23:38 little extra oomph to escape Earth's 23:40 gravitational pull to get goes into 23:43 space and then the one is the upper 23:46 stage engine. It's a single engine 23:48 centaur it's like the high-performance 23:50 race car that pushes GOES-S into orbit a 23:53 little farther once we get into space. 23:55 This is just I'm sorry this is just 23:57 amazing to see this and hear this it's 24:00 awesome to be this close so right now 24:02 people can see the the tractor or the 24:05 train part. Yeah you're looking at the 24:07 mobile launch platform and the Atlas 5 24:09 sitting on top of that as it moves into 24:11 launch complex 41 here at the pad and 24:14 there she is. 24:15 Yeah beautiful. So let's talk about GOES 24:18 LSP's history we were there with 24:20 GOES-L and that was way back in the 24:22 early 2000s, launched on an Atlas 2A. 24:25 Fast forward we got the GOES-S on 24:28 an Atlas 541. What's the difference with 24:31 those two and how was LSP part of both 24:34 of those? So Atlas 5 is a heritage 24:36 designed vehicle it was built off of the 24:38 Atlas 2A heritage that we launched as 24:40 you said in 2000 with goes L and back 24:44 then GOES was a little lighter it was a 24:46 smaller satellite so we could launch 24:48 that with an Atlas 2A - the lift 24:49 capability needed was perfect. with the GOES 24:52 R series or the GOES-S spacecraft 24:55 today it's a little heavier satellite 24:57 more telemetry more things that can 24:58 be done for weather so we had to go with 25:00 a bigger rocket, that lift capability to 25:02 get it into space and I think she's in 25:05 the shot let's talk about LSP's 25:09 history now this is the history our 25:11 future 2018 is a big year for us and it 25:15 starts off with GOES-S so let's break 25:17 down the next missions that we have for 25:19 the rest of this year yeah this year is 25:21 an exciting year for launch services 25:23 program here at Kennedy it is our 20th 25:25 anniversary. We started here in 1998 as a 25:28 program and 2018 is that culmination of 25:32 20 years and we got six launches in six 25:35 months using six different launch 25:37 vehicle configurations. It's great so 25:39 GOES-S is kicking that off. Our next 25:42 mission is TESS which is on a falcon 9 25:43 in a couple weeks following that we've 25:46 got the insight mission out of 25:48 Vandenberg on an Atlas vehicle again 25:50 that's very important to us because it's 25:52 an interplanetary mission off the west 25:54 coast that's that's exciting. 25:55 Then we go to icon which is launching on 25:57 our pegasus vehicle that airdrop vehicle 26:00 from the l-1011 and then parker Solar 26:02 Probe on a delta for another ULA vehicle 26:05 which is real exciting. It'll be the 26:07 first satellite to get that close to the 26:08 sun and then finalizing out the year is 26:12 icesat-2 and for a lot of us it's a 26:14 heart puller there because it's the last 26:16 delta 2 and it you know they've been a 26:19 workhorse for us at NASA. Atlas 5 is now 26:22 taking that place into that workhorse 26:24 family so we're doing great just 26:27 phenomenal year ahead and we hope you 26:28 join us for all of these missions and 26:31 with this we want to wrap it up Mick and 26:34 I are go for launch. The vehicle is here. 26:36 Back to you at studio Blair and Franklin. 26:42 Ok all right now Franklin yeah what are 26:45 the odds that right after they cut back 26:47 to us they broke out a bottle of 26:49 champagne that vehicle rolled right 26:55 through the shot during our live portion 26:57 and it did and it looked great it did 26:59 look great and I tell you one of the 27:00 interesting things is being right there 27:02 I got to tell you the jealousy factor 27:04 way high here 27:05 I wish how did Tiffany end up out there? 27:08 We should have been out there with with 27:10 Mick. 27:11 Pretty impressive spot and obviously 27:14 pretty impressive to see the rocket roll 27:16 right into place. Yeah I was out there 27:18 yesterday and I was able to see the 27:20 vertical integration facility but it was 27:23 covered the rocket was covered. They got 27:25 the money shot and I'm glad we did 27:27 because it looked great. Well I'll tell you what 27:29 Franklin it's very interesting that's 27:31 gonna wrap up our coverage but the most 27:32 important thing is after what you've 27:34 seen on the rollout tomorrow you're 27:36 going to want to tune in at 4:30 Eastern 27:38 Standard Time on NASA television and 27:40 watch the launch of GOES-S on this 27:43 beautiful Atlas 5 don't miss it tune in 27:46 tomorrow. You're watching NASA edge