Boeing prepares for radar lab launch
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Eron Ben-Yehuda
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- If engineers from the Boeing Co. give the go ahead, a
radar laboratory will be launched into space Monday.
Plans call for the lab to spend 11 days floating beyond the clouds,
collecting a trillion pieces of data to create “the most detailed
topographical map ever of the Earth,” said Alan D. Buis, a spokesman for
the aerospace giant.
During the lab’s launch and mission, there will be someone constantly
monitoring its progress from the company’s Huntington Beach facility,
which recently opened the world’s newest, largest and most sophisticated
private space-flight center.
The $3-million Engineering and Mission Support Room, unveiled in October,
helps ensure the safety and success of space flights using either the
company’s Delta rockets or space shuttles, product manager Mark M. Muhar
said.
The room is set up with 70 workstations hooked up to computer consoles
that check everything from a launch vehicle’s engines to instrumentation
and hydraulics, Muhar said. At the front of the room stands three
6-foot-tall monitors that display up-to-the-minute data on operations, he
said. If something isn’t working properly, the technicians can alert
their counterparts at NASA to scrub a launch, he said.
The mission support room is only a small part of the company’s sprawling
200-plus-acre campus at the corner of Bolsa Chica Street and Bolsa
Avenue. Along with office buildings, there are laboratories, some still
under construction, that help design upgrades and modifications to the
rockets and shuttles, Muhar said. Cryogenics facilities work on super
cold rocket fuels, Buis said. Large buildings that look like airplane
hangers test the durability of materials in space.
Although most of the company’s manufacturing and assembly occurs
elsewhere, a five-story “clean room” was used last year to assemble a
part of the future International Space Station. Boeing is building the
“backbone” of the station, which, upon completion around 2005, will
extend the length of a football field, officials said. It will be the
first permanently inhabited space laboratory, they said. Pieces of the
station are sent into space with the help of the shuttles, for which
Boeing is the largest subcontractor, Buis said.
Ever since Boeing began shutting down its facility in Downey, thousands
of employees have relocated to Huntington Beach. Since last year, the
ranks of employees here have swelled from about 6,000 to 10,000, making
Boeing the city’s largest employer, Buis said.
The company celebrated its successful consolidation by throwing an
outdoor party at its facility this week.
City officials rave about Boeing’s rising presence. Many of the company’s
highly educated employees will buy homes and shop in the city, which will
boost the local economy, City Councilwoman Pam Julien said.
“It’s an A+ for Huntington Beach,” she said.
The city’s image also enjoys a boost because Boeing represents high-tech,
City Councilwoman Shirley Dettloff said.
“This is an industry that looks to the future,” she said. “We’re on the
cutting edge.”
The state-of-the-art science Boeing is working on also has practical
applications. One of the anticipated results of Monday’s space lab
mission is that companies will find the best places to drill for oil and
gas, Buis said.
But there is a shroud of mystery over some of the work done there. While
some projects are classified, Buis insists nothing is “top secret.”
“If there is, I don’t know about it,” he joked. “I don’t have a need to
know.”
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