Information about Second Messenger

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Messenger may refer to:

Computers

  • An instant messaging client or service in general, or specifically one of the following services:
  • AOL Instant Messenger, an ad-supported instant messaging and presence computer program, published by America Online
  • BitWise IM, an instant messaging client published by BitWise Communications, LLC
  • Google Talk, an instant messaging client published by Google
  • Miranda IM, an opensource instant messaging client released under GNU GPL
  • MSN Messenger, the Microsoft instant messaging client preceding Windows Live Messenger
  • Windows Live Messenger, an instant messaging client published by Microsoft
  • Windows Messenger, the instant messaging client bundled with Windows XP
  • Yahoo! Messenger, an instant messaging client published by Yahoo!
  • QQ, an instant messaging client published by Tencent
  • The Messenger service, a network-based system notification service included in later versions of Microsoft Windows

Biology and chemistry

  • Chemical messenger or Hormone, a molecule used for cellular signalling
  • Messenger RNA (mRNA), RNA that carries information from DNA to the ribosome sites of protein synthesis in a cell

Media

The Arts

  • Messenger (album), the third album by Edwin McCain, released on June 15, 1999
  • , film
  • Messenger (novel), a novel written by Lois Lowry
  • Messenger, an
  • Messenger Records, a record label
  • ''Messenger (musical group), a Canadian modern rock music group founded in 2000

Other

  • MESSENGER, a NASA probe to Mercury launched in 2004
  • Messenger (horse), an English thoroughbred horse that was foaled in 1780, and who was the originating sire of modern-day standardbred horses
  • Bicycle messenger, a bicyclist who transports packages through cities
  • Muhammad, known as The Messenger in Islam
  • Miles Messenger, a British 1940s liaison aircraft
  • IM+ Messenger, mobile chat client
  • Messenger, a tool attached to a capstain used to raise the anchor cables on 17th - 19th century sailing ships

This article or section documents a current spaceflight. Details may change as the mission progresses.






Messenger
Enlarge picture
The MESSENGER spacecraft

An artist's interpretation of the MESSENGER spacecraft at Mercury
Organization:NASA
Mission type:Fly-by(s)/orbit
[ edit]
The MErcury Surface, Space ENvironment, GEochemistry and Ranging (or MESSENGER for short) is a NASA mission, launched August 3, 2004, designed to study the characteristics and environment of Mercury from orbit. Specifically, the objectives of the mission are to characterize the chemical composition of Mercury's surface, the geologic history, the nature of the magnetic field, the size and state of the core, the volatile inventory at the poles, and the nature of Mercury's exosphere and magnetosphere over a nominal orbital mission of one Earth year. The mission will be the first to return to Mercury in over 35 years — the only previous probe to visit Mercury was Mariner 10, which completed its mission in March, 1975. MESSENGER will offer several vast improvements in scanning ability, with cameras that can resolve surface features down to just 60 feet across (18 meters) compared to the one mile (1.61 kilometer) resolution offered by Mariner 10. MESSENGER will also be the first probe to image the entire planet; Mariner 10 was only able to observe one hemisphere that was lit during its flybys.

In addition to being an acronym, MESSENGER was chosen as the probe's name because Mercury was the messenger of the gods in Roman mythology.

Travel to Mercury

Enlarge picture
Launch of MESSENGER
The Boeing Delta II rocket carrying MESSENGER lifted off from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida at 02:15:56 EDT on August 3, 2004. An hour later, NASA confirmed that MESSENGER had successfully separated from the third stage booster and commenced its roundabout route to Mercury.

Travel to Mercury requires an extremely large velocity change, or delta-v, because of the planet's very high orbital velocity. Further, because Mercury does not have an atmosphere, it is impossible to aerobrake on arrival; the spacecraft must use rockets to slow down enough to go into orbit. To make the trip feasible, MESSENGER makes extensive use of gravity assist manueuvers. These reduce the energy (and thus fuel) requirements, but greatly prolong the trip.

MESSENGER performed a successful Earth swingby a year after launch, on 2 August 2005, with the closest approach at 19:13 UTC at an altitude of 2,347 km (1,458 statute miles) over central Mongolia. On December 12, 2005, a 524 second long burn ('Deep-Space Maneuver' or 'DSM-1') of the large thruster adjusted the trajectory for the upcoming Venus swing-by[1]. MESSENGER made its first flyby of Venus at 08:34 UTC on October 24, 2006 at an altitude of 2992 km. A second flyby of Venus was made at 23:08 UTC on June 5, 2007 at an altitude of 338 km. On October 17, 2007, 'Deep-Space Maneuver-2' or 'DSM-2' was executed successfully, putting MESSENGER on target for it's first flyby of Mercury[2]. MESSENGER will make three flybys of Mercury on 14 January and October 6, 2008 and September 29, 2009, successively slowing down the spacecraft. Mercury orbit insertion will be on March 18, 2011, beginning a year-long orbital mission.
Enlarge picture
MESSENGER's trajectory


During the Earth flyby, MESSENGER imaged the Earth and Moon and used its atmospheric and surface composition spectrometer to look at the Moon. The particle and magnetic field instruments investigated the Earth's magnetosphere.

The spacecraft was originally scheduled to launch during a 12-day window that opened May 11, 2004, but on March 26, 2004, NASA announced that a later launch window starting at July 30, 2004 with a length of 15 days would be used.[3] This significantly changed the trajectory of the mission and will delay the arrival at Mercury by two years. The original plan called for three swingby maneuvers past Venus, with Mercury orbit insertion scheduled for 2009. The new trajectory features one Earth flyby, two Venus flybys, and three Mercury flybys before orbit insertion on March 18, 2011.

The navigation team is lead by KinetX, Inc. of Tempe, AZ. KinetX is the first private company to be responsible for navigation of a NASA deep space mission. In that role, they are responsible for determining all trajectory adjustments throughout the probe's flight through the inner solar system ensuring that MESSENGER arrives at Mercury with the proper velocity for orbit insertion.

Mercury observation plan

The nominal orbit has a periapsis of 200 km at 60 degrees N latitude, and an apoapsis of 15,193 km, a period of 12 hours and an inclination of 80 degrees. The periapsis will slowly rise due to solar perturbations to over 400 km at the end of 88 days (one Mercury year) at which point it will be readjusted to a 200 km, 12 hour orbit via a two burn sequence. Data will be collected from orbit for one Earth year, the nominal end of the primary mission. Global stereo image coverage at 250 m/pixel resolution is expected. The mission should also yield global composition maps, a 3-D model of Mercury's magnetosphere, topographic profiles of the northern hemisphere, gravity field to degree and order 16, altitude profiles of elemental species, and a characterization of the volatiles in permanently shadowed craters at the poles.

Once there, scientists hope to test a theory that the planet is shrinking, contracting in on itself as its core slowly freezes. The probe will look for signs of surface buckling on Mercury's unobserved hemisphere, as well as collect surface composition data on material that may have once spewed out of the planet's interior. The idea that Mercury's surface was somehow shrinking arose when Mariner 10 returned images of great scarps biting deep into the planet's surface. One such scarp, Discovery Rupes, cuts one mile (1.6 kilometers) into Mercury's crust.

Spacecraft and subsystems

The MESSENGER spacecraft, designed and built by The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (JHU/APL), is a squat box (1.27 m × 1.42 m × 1.85 m) with a semi-cylindrical thermal shade for protection from the Sun and two solar panel wings extending radially. A 3.6 m magnetometer boom also extends from the craft. The total mass of the spacecraft is 1,093 kg, 607.8 kg of this is propellant and helium. The structure is primarily graphite cyanate ester (GrCE) composite and consists of two vertical panels which support two large fuel tanks and two vertical panels which support the oxidizer tank and plumbing panel. The four vertical panels make up the center column and are bolted at their aft ends to an aluminum adapter. A single top deck panel mounts the LVA (large velocity adjust) thruster, small thrusters, helium and auxiliary fuel tanks, star trackers and battery.

Enlarge picture
MESSENGER assembly at Astrotech
Main propulsion is via the 645 N, 317 s bipropellant LVA thruster. Four 22 N monopropellant thrusters provide spacecraft steering during main thruster burns, and ten 4 N monopropellant thrusters are used for attitude control. There is also a reaction wheel attitude control system. Knowledge for attitude control is provided by star tracking cameras, an inertial measurement unit, and six solar sensors. Power is provided by the solar panels, which extend beyond the sunshade and are rotatable to balance panel temperature and power generation, and provides a nominal 450 W in Mercury orbit. The panels are 70% optical solar reflectors and 30% GaAs/Ge cells. The power is stored in a common-pressure-vessel nickel metal hydride battery, with 11 vessels and 2 cells per vessel.

Communications are in X-band with downlink through two fixed phased array antenna clusters and uplink and downlink through medium- and low-gain antennas on the forward and aft sides of the spacecraft. Passive thermal control, primarily a fixed opaque ceramic cloth sunshade, is utilized to maintain operating temperatures near the Sun. Radiators are built into the structure and the orbit is optimized to minimize infrared and visible light heating of the spacecraft from the surface of Mercury. Multilayer insulation, low conductivity couplings, and heaters are also used to maintain temperatures within operating limits.

Five science instruments are mounted externally on the bottom deck of the main body: the Mercury Dual Imaging System (MDIS), Gamma-Ray and Neutron Spectrometer (GRNS), X-ray Spectrometer (XRS), Mercury Laser Altimeter (MLA), and Atmospheric and Surface Composition Spectrometer (MASCS). The Energetic Particle and Plasma Spectrometer (EPPS) is mounted on the side and top deck and the magnetometer (MAG) is at the end of the 3.6 m boom. Radio Science (RS) experiments will use the existing communications system.

MESSENGER's onboard computer system is based on the Integrated Electronics Module (IEM), a device that combines core avionics in a single box. The spacecraft carries a pair of identical IEMs for backup purposes; both house a 25 megahertz main processor and 10 MHz fault protection processor. All four are radiation hardened RAD6000 processors, based on IBM POWER CPUs (predecessor of the PowerPC chip found in older Macintoshes). The RAD computers, slow by current personal computer standards, are state of the art for the radiation tolerance required on the MESSENGER mission. For data, the spacecraft carries two solid state recorders (one backup) able to store up to one gigabyte each. Its main processor collects, compresses, and stores on the recorder images and other data from MESSENGER's instruments, which can then be sent back to earth at a more leisurely pace.

External links

References

1. ^ MESSENGER Engine Burn Puts Spacecraft on Track for Venus. SpaceRef.com (2005). Retrieved on 2006-03-02.
2. ^ Critical Deep-Space Maneuver Targets MESSENGER for Its First Mercury Encounter. NASA (2007-10-17). Retrieved on 2007-10-17.
3. ^ NASA (2004-03-24). MESSENGER Launch Rescheduled. Press release. Retrieved on 2007-07-01.
  1. NSSDC. NSSDC Master Catalog: Spacecraft: MESSENGER. Greenbelt, Maryland: National Space Science Data Center. July 14, 2004.


Instant messaging (IM) is a form of real-time communication between two or more people based on typed text. The text is conveyed via computers connected over a network such as the Internet.
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AOL Instant Messenger (AIM) is an advertisement-supported free proprietary instant messaging and presence computer program which uses the OSCAR instant messaging protocol and the TOC protocol. It was released by AOL in May of 1997.
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BitWise IM is a secure, cross-platform instant messaging client written using wxWidgets and is available for Windows, Mac OS X and Linux. It comes in two flavors, Personal and Professional.
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This article or section contains information about computer software currently in development.
The content may change as the software development progresses.
Google Talk

Modern Google talk beta screenshot.
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Miranda Instant Messenger is a minimalist, open source multiprotocol instant messaging application, designed for Microsoft Windows.

Miranda is free software distributed under GNU General Public License.
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MSN Messenger is a freeware instant messaging client that was developed and distributed by Microsoft in 1999 to 2005 and in 2007 for computers running the Microsoft Windows operating system (except Windows Vista), and aimed towards home users.
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Windows Live Messenger (WLM), still commonly referred to by the previous name of MSN Messenger (MSN for short), is an instant messaging client for Windows XP, Windows Server 2003, Windows Vista, and Windows Mobile, first released on December 13, 2005 by
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Windows Messenger is a proprietary instant messaging client included in Microsoft's Windows XP operating system. It is also available for Windows 2000 and Windows Server 2003, beginning with version 5, but is not included in Windows Vista.
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Yahoo! Messenger is a popular advertisement-supported instant messaging client and associated protocol provided by Yahoo!. Yahoo! Messenger is provided free of charge and can be downloaded and used with a generic "Yahoo! ID" which also allows access to other Yahoo! services, such
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QQ may refer to:
  • An emoticon used to symbolize crying, where tears are coming out of the corners of one's eyes, often used mockingly.
  • Alliance Airlines, IATA airline designator
  • Chery QQ, a compact Chinese car

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Messenger Service is a network-based system notification service included in some versions of Microsoft Windows. This service, although it has a similar name, is not related in any way to the .
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hormone (from Greek όρμή - "to set in motion") is a chemical messenger that carries a signal from one cell (or group of cells) to another. All multicellular organisms produce hormones (including plants - see phytohormone).
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Messenger Ribonucleic Acid (mRNA) is a molecule of RNA encoding a chemical "blueprint" for a protein product. mRNA is transcribed from a DNA template, and carries coding information to the sites of protein synthesis: the ribosomes.
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Messenger Newspapers have been reporting local suburban South Australian news since 1951. The Messenger is delivered weekly to 11 different suburban areas, each of these 11 papers contains content relevant to its distribution area.
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Messenger is Edwin McCain's third major-label album, released on June 15, 1999. It was recorded at Tree Sound Studios & Southern Tracks in Atlanta, Georgia, and Record Plant Studios in Los Angeles, California, and released by Lava Records.
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Messenger

Author Lois Lowry
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Children's, Dystopian novel
Publisher Houghton Mifflin
Publication date 2004
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
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Messenger Records is an independent record label. Based out of New York City, USA, the label was started by Brandon Kessler during his time in college in 1996. The label currently releases albums by Anne McCue, Dan Bern, Chris Whitley, Johnny Society, and others.
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Messenger (b. 1780) was an English thoroughbred stallion bred by a John Pratt and imported into the newly formed United States of America just after the American Revolution.
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Bicycle messengers (also known as bike or cycle couriers) are people who work for courier companies (also known as messenger companies) carrying and delivering items by bicycle. Bicycle messengers are most often found in the central business districts of metropolitan areas.
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Islamic prophet Muhammad

Life
  • Family tree
  • In Mecca'''
  • In Medina'''
  • Conquest of Mecca
  • The Farewell Sermon
  • Succession

Roles
  • Diplomacy

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Type Liaison
Manufacturer Miles Aircraft
Maiden flight 12 September 1942
Primary user Royal Air Force
Produced 1942-1948
Number built 93
Developed from Miles M.28 Mercury The Miles M.
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IM+ is a multi-network mobile IM client that enables chat capabilities within all public instant messaging systems. IM+ allows its users to communicate within MSN®/ Windows Live Messenger™, Yahoo!®, AOL Instant Messenger, ICQ, Google Talk, Jabber and MySpace IM in real time.
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Spaceflight is the use of space technology to fly a spacecraft into and through outer space.

Spaceflight is used in space exploration, and also in commercial activities like space tourism and satellite telecommunications.
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National Aeronautics and Space Administration

NASA logo
Motto: For the Benefit of All[1]

NASA seal
Agency overview
Formed 29 July 1958

Headquarters Washington D.C.

Annual Budget $16.
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National Aeronautics and Space Administration

NASA logo
Motto: For the Benefit of All[1]

NASA seal
Agency overview
Formed 29 July 1958

Headquarters Washington D.C.

Annual Budget $16.
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August 3 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.

Events

  • 8 - Roman Empire general Tiberius defeats Dalmatians on the river Bathinus.

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20th century - 21st century - 22nd century
1970s  1980s  1990s  - 2000s -  2010s  2020s  2030s
2001 2002 2003 - 2004 - 2005 2006 2007

2004 by topic:
News by month
Jan - Feb - Mar - Apr - May - Jun
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Mercury  

Mariner 10 photomosaic of Mercury
Orbital characteristics[1]
Epoch J2000
Aphelion distance: 69,816,927 km
0.46669733 AU
Perihelion distance: 46,001,210 km
0.
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ORBit is a CORBA compliant Object Request Broker (ORB). The current version is called ORBit2 and is compliant with CORBA version 2.4. It is developed under the GPL license and is used as middleware for the GNOME project.
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magnetic field is a field that permeates space and which exerts a magnetic force on moving electric charges and magnetic dipoles. Magnetic fields surround electric currents, magnetic dipoles, and changing electric fields.
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This article is copied from an article on Wikipedia.org - the free encyclopedia created and edited by online user community. The text was not checked or edited by anyone on our staff. Although the vast majority of the wikipedia encyclopedia articles provide accurate and timely information please do not assume the accuracy of any particular article. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License.
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