New Millennium Program Technology Validation Reports masthead DS1 Technology Validation Reports submasthead Deep Space 1 (DS1) launched from Cape Canaveral on October 24, 1998. During a highly successful primary mission, it tested 12 advanced, high-risk technologies in space. In an extremely successful extended mission, it encountered Comet Borrelly and returned the best images and other science data ever from a comet. During its fully successful hyperextended mission, it conducted further technology tests. The spacecraft was retired on December 18, 2001. The following DS1 technology validation reports were published in Adobe Acrobat Portable Document Format (PDF), the latest of which were created for Acobat Reader 6.0. Download a free PDF Reader 6.0 or higher from Adobe Systems, Inc. * Cover * Results from the Deep Space 1 Technology Validation Mission ? Stowed configurations/Trajectory * Autonomous Optical Navigation (AutoNav) * * Beacon Monitor Operations Experiment * Ion Propulsion System (NSTAR) * IPS Diagnostic System (IDS) * Ka-Band Solid-State Power Amplifier (KAPA) * Low Power Electronics (LPE) * Multifunctional Structures Technology (MFS) * Power Actuation and Switching Module (PASM) * Plasma Experiment for Planetary Exploration (PEPE ) * Remote Agent Experiment * Scarlet Solar Array * Small Deep Space Transponder (SDST) The Integrated Reports (the complete collection, 21 MB)* * This file updated April 26, 2004. DS1 website: http://nmp.jpl.nasa.gov/ds1 This publication was prepared at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory , California Institute of Technology , under contract with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration . JPL, 4800 Oak Grove Ave., Pasadena, CA 91109. Produced by JPL's Multimedia Publishing JPL Publication 00-10, 10/2000. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ DS2 (TBD) EARTH OBSERVING 1 (TBD) EARTH OBSERVING 3 (TBD) SPACE TECHNOLOGY 5 (TBD) NASA Responsible Official: Charles P. Minning , Ph.D. Site curator: Christopher Weaver JPL clearance: CL 01-0554 This Web site updated: Thu, 29 Apr 2004 16:5 NASA Privacy Statement