Launch from Cape Canaveral (
KSC) and
landing on Edwards
AFB, Runway 04.
The launch was originally
scheduled for November 20, 1989, but was delayed because of suspect integrated
electronics assemblies which control ignition and separation of the Shuttle's
solid rocket boosters.
S. David
Griggs, the originally scheduled pilot for this mission, died
in a plane crash 5 months prior to the shuttle launch. He was replaced by John
Blaha.
This flight was the
fifth mission dedicated
to the Department of Defense, and most information about it remained
classified. For the fourth time,
NASA did not provide pre-launch commentary to the
public until nine minutes before liftoff. It was the third military mission
without a
MSE among the crew members.
Mail goal was
to deploy the reconnaissance satellite "Big Ear" (Magnum 2; USA-48), a
secret Magnum ELINT (ELectronic INTtelligence) satellite. The satellite
replaced the one launched by
STS-51C,
which was running out of the maneuvering fuel required for keeping its station
over the Indian Ocean. The satellite was deployed on the 7
th orbit,
and ignited its Inertial Upper Stage (
IUS) booster at the ascending node of the 8th orbit,
successfully placing it in a geosynchronous transfer orbit. This was the
8
th
IUS launched aboard the shuttle, and the seventh
successfully deployed. According to Jim Slade of ABC News, the satellite was
intended to eavesdrop on military and diplomatic communications from the Soviet
Union, China, and other communist states.
Aviation Week claimed that the
shuttle initially entered a 204-kilometers (127 mi) x 519-kilometers (322 mi)
orbit at an inclination of 28.45 degrees to the equator. It then executed three
Orbital Maneuvering System (
OMS) burns, the last on its fourth orbit. The first
burn was to circularize the orbit at 519 kilometers (322 mi).
STS-33 was observed by the 1.6m telescope of the
US
Air Force Maui Optical Station (AMOS) during five passes over Hawaii.
Spectrographic and infrared images of the shuttle obtained with the
Enhanced
Longwave Spectral Imager (ELSI) were aimed at studying the interactions
between gases released by the shuttle's primary reaction control system and
residual atmospheric oxygen and nitrogen species in orbit.
Frederick
Gregory became the first Afro-American spacecraft commander.
The landing was postponed for one day because of strong winds at the
landing site.