NASA Instrument and Sensing Technology

NASA Space

Instrument and Sensing Technology

Space Mission Acronym List and Hyperlink Guide

(G through H)


NOTICE: Because the original page had grown so large (~168K), I have split it into 14 pages, including this page for mission acronyms beginnig with G and H. Some direct, named links will no longer work. If you cannot find information on the mission you are looking for, you may find some information on the General Information page.

SPACE MISSIONS

Galileo

Launched from STS-34 on October 18, 1989.

GE -- Global Electrodynamics

Gemini

Genesis

A Discovery mission.

GEOS

GEOS-l, launched in April 1977, GEOS-2 launched in July 1978.

GEOSAT

See also GEOSAT Follow-On.

Geotail

Launched on 24 July 1992. NASA's contributions to Geotail, SOHO, and Cluster are referred to as the COSTR Program.

GFC-1

A 20 Kg. German-built laser geodetic spacecraft developed by Kayser-Threde. GFC-1 is scheduled to be spring-ejected from a Mir airlock on April 19, 1995. The spacecraft has 60 laser retro-reflectors on its surface. Ground stations will reflect laser beams from the spacecraft to obtain data on Earth's gravitational field. This measurement technique is like that used on LAGEOS. I just did a quick web search but I have not found a page that confirms this actually happened as scheduled.

GFO -- GEOSAT Follow-On

GFZ -- GeoForschungsZentrum

GGS -- Global Geospace Science

The Wind and Polar missions are the two components of the GGS Program. NASA's GGS and COSTR Programs comprise the United States contribution to the ISTP science initiative.

GIFTS -- Geostationary Imaging Fourier Transform Spectrometer

The third Earth Observation (EO-3) mission under the New Millennium Program.

Ginga

GIOTTO

Launched in 1985.

GLAST -- Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope

GO -- The Great Observatories

The four Great Observatories are HST, CGRO, AXAF, and SIRTF.

GOES -- Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellites

NOAA assigns a letter to the satellite before it is launched, and a number once it has achieved orbit. For example, GOES-H, once in orbit, was designated GOES-7, GOES-G, which was lost at launch, was never assigned a number. GOES-I was launched on April 13, 1994, and has been officially renamed GOES-8. Earlier launches were: GOES-1, October 1975; GOES-2, June 1977; GOES-3, June 1978; GOES-4, September 1980; GOES-5, May 1981; GOES-6, April 1983; GOES-7, February 1987. See also SMS.

GP-B -- Gravity Probe-B

GPS -- Global Positioning System

The DOD lauched the first of the production series of GPS satellites in 1989. The system was declared operational by the DOD on December 8, 1993 (for military use) and in February 1994 (for civil use). The system consists of 24 satellites in 11,000 mile high orbits. A GPS receiver uses the timing signals from the satellites to calculate the distance to the satellites. When a GPS receiver can collect signals from at least four satellites, it can determine its latitude, longitude, altitude, and the time.

For GPS-MET or GPS/MET see MicroLab-1.

GRANAT

GRANAT is the Russian x-ray sattelite, lanched in December 1989. It is still operating - 5 years after launch.

GRACE -- Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment

The second ESSP mission, planned for launch in the spring of 2001 on a Russian KOSMOS launch vehicle.

Greensat

GRO -- Gamma-Ray Observatory

See CGRO.

GTC -- Grand Tour Cluster

HALCA

VSOP was renamed HALCA after its successful launch on February 12, 1997 on the new ISAS M-V rocket from the Kagoshima Space Center. See also MUSES-B.

The VSOP (VLBI Space Observatory Programme) mission is being developed by the Institute of Space and Astronautical Science, in collaboration with the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan. The first VSOP satellite, MUSES-B, was scheduled for launch in September of 1996, however in June 1996 the launch was delayed until January/February 1997 due to a problem with the new M-V rocket.

HCMM/AEM-A -- Heat Capacity Mapping Mission Applications Explorer Mission

Launched April 26, 1978 on Scout 98 from WSMC (reentered December 22, 1981). Heat Capacity Mapping Mission to test the feasibility of measuring variations in the Earth's temperatures. See also AEM.

HEAO -- High Energy Astronomy Observatories

HEAO 1 launched August 12, 1977 on an Atlas Centaur rocket and operated until January 9, 1979.

See EO for HEAO 2.

Helios

Helios-1A launched July 7, 1995, from Kourou, French Guiana on an Ariane 40. Helios-1B: Planned for launch in 1999 or 2000.

HEOS -- Highly Eccentric Orbit Satellite

See ESRO. HEOS- 1 was launched in December 1968 to study the interplanetary magnetic field. HEOS-2 was launched in January 1972 to continue the mission of its predecessor HEOS-1.

Hermes

Apparently this was a mission to Mercury proposed or under study by JPL. The link is no longer working and I am not aware of any other on-line sources. Hermes is also the name or a proposed French Manned Spaceplane.

HESI -- High Energy Solar Imager

Now renamed HESSI.

HESP -- High Energy Solar Physics

I'm a little lost on this one, but I think this is what has happened. An earlier concept for HESP was renamed first HESI and then HESSI. However the long term need for development in this area means that HESP is still being used for the longer-term mission concepts in the SEC roadmap.

HESSI -- High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager

Previously know as HESI and HESP.

HESSI was selected in (April or) May 1995 through the first MIDEX Announcement of Opportunity (AO) as a possible alternate.

HETE -- High-Energy Transient Experiment

The Orbital Sciences Corp. Pegasus XL launch occurred November 4, 1996 at approximately 12:09 p.m. EST offshore from NASA's Wallops Flight Facility, Wallops Island, VA. The Pegasus vehicle achieved the desired orbit of 265 nautical miles by 297 nautical miles at an inclination of 38 degrees. Analysis of the launch shows that the Orbital Sciences Corporation's Pegasus XL third stage failed to separate from the satellites. HETE comprised one half of the rocket payload. The other half was the SAC-B satellite.

HIPPARCOS -- HIgh Precision PARallax COllecting Satellite

Launched in August 1989.

Hiten

Japanese twin spacecraft launched toward the moon in August 1990. The MUSES-A satellite was renamed Hiten after its launch in 1990. (Hiten is the name of a figure from Japanese mythology.)

Horus

Radar spy satellite being developed by Germany.

HST -- Hubble Space Telescope

HST, one of the four Great Observatories, is a 2.4-meter reflecting telescope that was launched on the space shuttle Discovery (STS-31) on April 24, 1990, and deployed in low-Earth orbit (600 kilometers) on April 25.

HUBE -- Hopkins Ultraviolet Background Explorer

HUBE was selected in (April or) May 1995 through the first MIDEX Announcement of Opportunity (AO) as a possible alternate.

Huygens

Titan probe, carried to Saturn by Cassini.

HUTSAT -- Helsinki University of Technology Satellite

AIRCRAFT/BALLOON MISSIONS

Airborne Missions

GLOBE -- The GLObal Backscatter Experiment


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Created September 19, 1996. Last major update: June 24, 1997 (limited update as recent as July 31, 2000). Please see my Disclaimer and Web Policy page. This page was maintained by Gordon Johnston. However, effective September 1997, I no longer work for the Office of Space Science. If you send me a correction, I will try to enter it on a time available, best efforts basis:

Gordon.Johnston@hq.nasa.gov

The world wide web uniform resource locator (URL) for this page is:

http://ranier.hq.nasa.gov/Sensors_page/MissionLinks/mlgh.html