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Launch of Swift
The Boeing Delta rocket launches from Cape Canaveral carrying the Swift gamma-ray observatory. This extended clip follows the mission through second stage ignition and includes onboard video of the nose cone separation. (5min 45sec file)
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Nose cone jettison
The Delta rocket's upward-facing video camera captures the nose cone covering Swift being jettisoned about five minutes into flight. (1min 06sec file)
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Swift deployed
A video camera mounted on the Delta rocket's second stage shows maneuvers to the proper orientation for release of Swift high above Earth and the observatory's successful deployment. (8min 00sec file)
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Cocoa Beach view
A powerful tracking camera located at Cocoa Beach south of the pad provides this spectacular view from liftoff through the early minutes of flight by the Delta rocket and Swift. (2min 54sec file)
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MESSENGER spacecraft completes third maneuver
MESSENGER MISSION REPORT
Posted: November 21, 2004

MESSENGER completed its third trajectory correction maneuver since launch - and its last of 2004 - trimming its speed and tweaking its course toward the Earth flyby next August.

The 48-second burst from MESSENGERıs hydrazine-fueled thrusters reduced the spacecraftıs velocity by just over 7 miles per hour (3.2 meters per second) relative to the Sun - easing it into a cruising speed of about 62,030 miles (99,827 kilometers) per hour. The maneuver started at 2:30 p.m. EST on Nov. 18; mission operators at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland, began tracking it about two minutes later, when the first signals indicating thruster activity reached the NASA Deep Space Network tracking station near Madrid, Spain.

MESSENGER, now nearly 22.8 million miles (36.7 million kilometers) from Earth, is in good health and operating normally. Detailed checkouts of the science instruments and subsystems continue. The solar-powered spacecraft continues to fly with its sunshade away from the sun, allowing it to keep its key systems warm without using power for heaters. Since launch last August 3, MESSENGERıs computers have executed more than 15,000 commands from mission control.

The next "TCM" is tentatively planned for March 10, 2005.

MESSENGER (MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry, and Ranging) is a scientific investigation of the planet Mercury, and the first NASA mission designed to orbit the planet closest to the Sun. Dr. Sean C. Solomon, of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, leads the mission as principal investigator. The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland, built and operates the MESSENGER spacecraft and manages the Discovery-class mission for NASA.