X-37B returns to Earth after 7-month mission - Air Force News | News from Afghanistan & Iraq - Air Force Times

Quick Links

Webtools

Click here for Military Times Webtools
Print Email
Bookmark and Share
http://www.airforcetimes.com/news/2010/12/ap-air-force-x37b-returns-to-vandenberg-120310/

X-37B returns to Earth after 7-month mission


By John Antczak - The Associated Press
Posted : Friday Dec 3, 2010 18:36:29 EST

LOS ANGELES — The military’s secretive X-37B unmanned space plane slipped out of orbit and landed itself in early morning darkness Friday at a California airbase after a successful maiden flight that lasted more than seven months, the Air Force said.

The stubby-winged, robotic craft fired its engine to begin re-entry into Earth’s atmosphere and autonomously landed at 1:16 a.m. Pacific time at coastal Vandenberg Air Force Base, 130 miles northwest of Los Angeles. Range safety officers were on hand to track its descent over the Pacific and activate a destruct mechanism if the landing needed to be aborted. There were no immediate reports of any sonic booms being heard.

Vandenberg released infrared camera video of the craft rolling to a stop, recovery crews approaching in vehicles and working around it in protective suits, much the way space shuttles are handled upon landing.



See More Video From Military Times


The Air Force had emphasized that the primary purpose of the flight was to test the craft itself but classified its actual activities in orbit, leading to speculation about whether it carried some type of spying system in its small payload bay.

Program manager Lt. Col. Troy Giese said in a statement that all objectives were completed and the landing culminated a successful mission.

The Air Force immediately announced that a second X-37B — the plane had only been revealed last April — is scheduled to be launched next spring.

The first X-37B, also known as the Orbital Test Vehicle, was carried into space atop an Atlas 5 rocket launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla., on April 22.

The flight followed the project’s long and expensive journey from NASA to the Pentagon’s research and development arm and then on to the secretive Air Force Rapid Capabilities Office. Hundreds of millions of dollars have been spent on the X-37 program, but the current total hasn’t been released.

Built by Boeing Co.’s Phantom Works, the 11,000-pound craft is 9½ feet tall and just over 29 feet long, with a wingspan of less than 15 feet. It has two angled tail fins rather than a single vertical stabilizer.

Solar panels deploy in orbit to charge batteries for electrical power.

Officials made public only a general description of the mission objectives: testing of guidance, navigation, control, thermal protection and autonomous operation in orbit, re-entry and landing.

The ultimate purpose of the X-37B has long remained a mystery, though some experts said the spacecraft is intended to speed up development of combat-support systems and weapons systems.

Last spring, Gary Payton, Air Force undersecretary for space programs, rejected characterization of the project as leading to the weaponization of space.

“It’s just an updated version of the space shuttle kind of activities in space,” he said during a conference call with reporters. “We, the Air Force, have a suite of military missions in space and this new vehicle could potentially help us do those missions better.”

Top priorities for the project are to demonstrate an inexpensive and fast turnaround, he said.

Need for extensive servicing such as replacement of many thermal tiles would make it unattractive, he said.

Payton suggested the X-37B would be useful for rapidly putting many small satellites into orbit, with a turnaround time measured at 10-to-15 days or less, operating more like an SR-71 spyplane than a routine space launch vehicle.

Like the first X-37B, the budget for the second space plane is classified, he said.

Defense analyst John Pike, a critic of the X-37B’s usefulness, said the autonomous orbital and landing system apparently worked, but he remained skeptical of the program.

“They demonstrated that they could keep a secret about whatever else it might have been doing,” said Pike, director of Globalsecurity.org. “It remains a mystery wrapped in an enigma.”

———

Associated Press writer Alicia Chang contributed to this report.

Videos You May Be Interested In

Leave a Comment





Air Force The X-37B, seen after landing at Vandenberg Air Force Base, conducted on-orbit experiments for more than 220 days during its maiden voyage.

Contests and Promotions

Free Stickers


promo Click here and we'll send you a FREE AFGHANISTAN, IRAQ, VIETNAM, or DESERT STORM sticker.

MIl-MALL

Browse and buy some of the awesome products we have at Mil-mall.com

Military Discounts


Save on your purchases!
In honor of your military service, you can find regular and name brand products at a special discount.