Showing posts with label Soyuz flight. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Soyuz flight. Show all posts

Friday, April 27, 2012

NASA ISS Expedition 30 Crew Land safely in Kazakhstan - Video




Expedition 30 Commander Dan Burbank is carried to a medical tent after being extracted from the Soyuz TMA-22 spacecraft (Credits: NASA).
The Soyuz TMA-22 spacecraft carrying Expedition 30 Commander Dan Burbank and Flight Engineers Anton Shkaplerov and Anatoly Ivanishin landed in Kazakhstan at 7:45 a.m. EDT. They undocked from the International Space Station at 4:18 a.m. EDT officially ending their stay.

The Soyuz performed a deorbit burn at 6:49 a.m. before the descent module separated from the rest of the Russian spacecraft and entered the Earth’s atmosphere. Afterward, the Soyuz deployed several parachutes, slowing its descent, and then fired three small engines to soften its landing.

How are you getting home today?

Monday, February 20, 2012

Space station panel installation delayed

Two Russian cosmonauts will have to install International Space Station debris panels another day after their spacewalk took longer than expected, NASA said.

Space station Flight Engineers Oleg Kononenko and Anton Shkaplerov used a 6-hour, 15-minute, spacewalk to move a 46-foot telescoping boom from one docking port to another on the station's Russian segment, the U.S. space agency and the Russian Federal Space Agency's Mission Control Center said.

"Thank you so much for everything you've done," a Russian ground controller radioed in Russian. "You accomplished an enormous task."

The spacewalk was supposed to have included installation of debris shields to the Zvezda Service Module, which provides all the station's life-support systems, the space agencies said, but the cosmonauts ran out of time and the installation will take place on a later spacewalk, officially known as an extravehicular activity, the NASA said.

The Thursday spacewalk was the first for Shkaplerov and third for Kononenko, who has logged 18 hours, 27 minutes of extravehicular activity.

The space station is staffed by three Russians, two Americans and a Dutchman. U.S. Coast Guard Capt. Dan Burbank, a veteran of two space-shuttle missions, is the expedition commander. U.S. chemical engineer Don Pettit, a veteran of a six-month space-station stay and a six-week Antarctic expedition to find meteorites, is a flight engineer.

The space station, continuously occupied for more than 11 years, is maintained at an orbital altitude of 205 miles to 255 miles above Earth. It circles the planet about every 90 minutes and completes nearly 16 orbits a day.

The station is expected to remain in operation until at least 2020.

Sunday, February 19, 2012

ESA ISS Image: Russian EVA

Russian EVA provides beautiful pictures.

Credit: ESA/NASA

Friday, February 10, 2012

Space Adventures: Tours around the Moon: $150 Million


Space tours will soon be a reality with the announcement of the Virginia-based Space Adventures of their plants to offer trips around the moon to space tourists five years from now.
Space Adventures, a private space exploration company, it expect to begin launching their trips around the moon in February 2017, which is the 50th anniversary of the start of the Apollo program.

For a price of $150 million, a space tourist would be launched into space aboard a three-seat Russian Soyuz spacecraft.

The vehicle would then rendezvous with an unmanned rocket that would take the spacecraft to the moon and encircle the moon at an altitude of 62 miles.
Space Adventures has reportedly sold one of the two tickets available, and is negotiating with the second space tourist.

A number of startup companies have sprung up in recent years, hoping to create a space tourism industry. However, orbital space tourism opportunities have been limited and expensive.

Some of space tourists have signed contracts with third parties to conduct certain research activities while in orbit.

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Space Radiation Doomed Russian Phobos Satellite


Space radiation most likely caused the demise of a Russian Mars probe that got stuck in Earth orbit shortly after launch and ultimately crashed back to the surface earlier this month, Russia's Federal Space Agency chief said today (Jan. 31), according to media reports.

Russian space chief Vladimir Popovkin said that an investigation pointed to cosmic radiation as the likely culprit in the failure of the Phobos-Grunt mission, but also suggested that an imported spacecraft component may not have been adequately hardened for the harsh radiation environment in space, reported the Associated Press.

"Two components of the onboard computer system were spontaneously rebooted and it switched into a standby mode," Popovkin said in a televised remark, according to the Russian news service Ria Novosti. "The most likely reason [for the glitch] is the impact of heavy charged space particles."

Russia's Phobos-Grunt space probe malfunctioned shortly after its November 2011 launch, preventing it from continuing on toward Mars.

Sunday, January 15, 2012

ESA Soyuz Tracking Phobos Grunt: Sunday update

Ballistics European clarified during the fall of the Russian station "Phobos-Grunt" to within plus or minus 1.6 hours, told RIA Novosti on Sunday, the head of the European Space Agency (ESA), Rene Pishel.

"According to the last calculated data," Phobos-Grunt "may fall in 21.32 GMT plus or minus 1.6 hours," - said Pishel.

According to him, an indication of the impact area of ​​debris will become available no earlier than one hour before entering the machine in the Earth's atmosphere.

"It is possible to calculate only during the passage of the spacecraft its final turn around the Earth" - concluded the representative of the ESA.

Data Space Agency
Federal Space Agency, according to recent estimates, expects that the plant will fall to Earth in the range between 20.41 and 01.05 GMT on Sunday GMT on Monday.

The device falls into a "strip" of 51.4 degrees north latitude to 51.4 degrees south latitude. According to 12.00 Moscow time on Sunday, "Phobos-Grunt" in Earth orbit with an apogee of 153.4 km and a perigee of 133.5 kilometers.

In this report, Russian Space Agency, as well as in the previous year, the central point is not specified timeframe, as well as the crash site, which corresponds to this point. However, the much smaller area was estimated incidence of debris.

In turn, the source in the Russian space industry told RIA Novosti that "Phobos-Grunt" may enter the atmosphere over the north-western regions of China, near the western border of Mongolia.

According to him, the central point corresponds to the location of log coordinates 41.8 degrees north latitude, 91.7 degrees east longitude.

This point is located on the territory of China, Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, 404 kilometers from Urumqi.

However, the spokesman stressed that in reality, the device can enter the atmosphere far from that point.

"We have spread more than a turn in either direction, so to speak about the point is not quite correct. One turn in front of him and one after," - said the source.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Rocosmos update: Phobos Grunt

As of January 14 spacecraft (SC) "Phobos-Grunt" is on the earth elliptical orbit with the following parameters:

- Apogee (maximum altitude) - 174.2 km;

- Perigee (minimum altitude) - 149.7 km;

- Inclination - 51.44 degrees.;

- Period - 87.57 min.

The projected drop box residues of spacecraft "Phobos-Grunt" on Earth is determined by the dates from the 15th to 16th January, with a central point - 15 January at 21:51 GMT. Possible area falling in the "band" of 51.4 degrees north latitude to 51.4 degrees south latitude is shown in the diagram.

Operational Group is monitoring the convergence of the orbit of the spacecraft "Phobos-Grunt."

Friday, January 13, 2012

Did US shoot Phobos-Grunt down? No!

Sometime this weekend, Phobos-Grunt will crash into the Indian Ocean.

The Russian space probe was supposed to return a sample from Mars's moon Phobos (hence the name – grunt means "ground" in Russian).

Unfortunately, after its launch on 9 November, the upper stages failed, and it remained stuck in low Earth orbit – so low that atmospheric drag will draw it back to Earth and destroy it.

It took more than a decade and some $163 million to build Phobos-Grunt, so it its inexplicable failure was understandably frustrating for the Russians.

In a bizarre interview, Vladimir Popovkin, the head of Russia's space agency, alluded to foul play: "We don't want to accuse anybody, but there are very powerful devices that can influence spacecraft now. The possibility they were used cannot be ruled out," he said, in The New York Times's translation.

He insinuated that the US was to blame: "The frequent failure of our space launches, which occur at a time when they are flying over the part of Earth not visible from Russia, where we do not see the spacecraft and do not receive telemetric information, are not clear to us."

The claim that Phobos-Grunt was shot down is absurd but that's not because it would be hard to do. If you can launch satellites, it is easier to destroy them, and to do so with deniability isn't much harder.

Had the US wanted to destroy Phobos-Grunt, it could have but it's hard to fathom why – not least of all because doing so would have messed with a couple of scientific missions piggy-backed onto the Russian probe: a Chinese Mars orbiter and an experiment run by the Planetary Society, an American space advocacy group co-founded by Carl Sagan.

More importantly, there is a global taboo on war in space. The US would not have broken it arbitrarily to destroy a scientific probe.

No country has ever (so far as is known in the unclassified literature) attacked another's satellite.

When China tested an anti-satellite weapon against one of its own satellites in 2007, it provoked an international outcry because it created more than 4000 new bits of debris, increasing by almost half the amount of trackable "space junk".

The US broke a de facto moratorium on space weapon testing in 2008, when a missile launched from a navy cruiser destroyed an American satellite, the first such test since 1985 (when an F-15-launched missile was the weapon of choice).

The US has by far the most invested in space. That gives it the most to lose. Military hawks talk about space as the "ultimate high ground."

This is silly, space is high ground, sure enough, and tremendously useful militarily but spacecraft are (and always will be) fragile, vulnerable things, unlike castles or forts built on normal, non-ultimate high grounds.

Popovkin's speculation is almost certainly incorrect and comes from a paranoid nation. I also suspect it was likely to be deliberate nationalist pandering, perhaps not meant to be taken seriously but there are two reasons why this is worrisome.

The first is that it's hard to prove he's wrong, so when the next, more militarily useful, spacecraft fails, the accusation can resurface. The other is that Popovkin, and the Soyuzes he controls, are the only way to get American astronauts to the International Space Station.

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Russian Phobos Grunt satellite debris lands in Cosmonaut Street

Fragments of a Russian satellite that failed to launch properly have landed in a street named after cosmonauts in a remote Siberian village, reports say.

The Meridian communications satellite failed to reach orbit on Friday.

Parts crashed into the Novosibirsk region of central Siberia and were found in the Ordynsk district around 100km (60 miles) south of the regional capital, Novosibirsk.

Residents of Vagaitsevo village said a piece had landed on a house there.

The owner of the house, Andrei Krivoruchenko, said that he heard a huge noise and a crash as the satellite hit the roof.

"I climbed up onto the roof and could not work out what had happened. Then I saw a huge hole in the roof and the metal object," he told Russian state television.

The head of the Ordynsk district, Pavel Ivarovksy, told Russia's Interfax news agency that the damage was being examined by specialists and that the home's owner would be compensated.

The loss of the Meridian satellite ends a disastrous 12 months for Russian space activity with the loss of three navigation satellites, an advanced military satellite, a telecommunications satellite, a probe for Mars and as an unmanned Progress supply ship.

Earlier this month, Russia also failed to launch a Soyuz rocket.

The next Soyuz launch is scheduled for 26 December from the Baikonur Cosmodrome.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

NASA Expedition 30: Soyuz Rolls to Baikonur Launch Pad

The Soyuz TMA-03M spacecraft is rolled out by train on its way to the launch pad at the Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan, Monday, Dec. 19, 2011.

The launch of the Soyuz spacecraft with Expedition 30 Soyuz Commander Oleg Kononenko of Russia, NASA Flight Engineer Don Pettit and European Space Agency astronaut and Flight Engineer Andre Kuipers is scheduled for 8:16 a.m. EST on Wednesday, Dec. 21.

Image Credit: NASA/Carla Cioffi

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

New Crew Arrives at Space Station on Russian TMA-22 Spaceship

Top row (from left to right): Japanese astronaut Satoshi Furukawa, NASA astronaut Mike Fossum and Russian cosmonaut Sergei Volkov. 

Bottom row (from left to right): Russian cosmonaut Anton Shkaplerov, NASA astronaut Dan Burbank, and Russian cosmonaut Anatoly Ivanishin.
CREDIT: NASA TV

A spacecraft carrying the three newest residents of the International Space Station safely arrived at the orbiting outpost today (Nov. 16), after a two-day space journey.

NASA astronaut Dan Burbank and Russian cosmonauts Anton Shkaplerov and Anatoly Ivanishin reached the space station early Wednesday, slightly ahead of schedule at 12:24 a.m. EST (0524 GMT).

The trio parked their Russian-built Soyuz TMA-22 capsule at the Poisk mini research module on the station's Russian segment, as both spacecraft flew 248 miles (400 kilometers) above the South Pacific.

The crew conducted an extensive set of leak checks before they opened the hatch of their capsule and floated into the station.

The hatches between the two spacecraft were opened at 2:39 a.m. EST (0839 GMT), according to NASA officials. The two crews greeted each other with laughter, hugs, and warm welcomes.

Sunday, November 13, 2011

NASA Soyuz: ISS Expedition 29 Crew Image

photo
Expedition 29 crew members NASA Flight Engineer Daniel Burbank, far left, Russian Soyuz Commander Anton Shkaplerov, Russian Flight Engineer Anatoly Ivanishin, Expedition 29 NASA back up crew member Joseph Acaba, backup Soyuz Commander Gennady Padalka and backup Flight Engineer Sergei Revin, far right, pose for photos at the end of a press conference held at the Cosmonaut Hotel in Baikonur, Kazakhstan on Saturday, Nov. 12, 2011. 

Photo Credit: (NASA/Carla Cioffi)

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Russia Phobos-Grunt: Mars-bound Craft Loses Way Minutes After Launch

Adding to the country's list of space bungles, a Russian space craft designed to collect rock and dust samples from a Martian moon has flown of course just minutes after being launched.

The Russian space agency has since reported that the craft veered off course after an engine designed to keep it on track failed to start.

As a result of the engine failure the probe is reportedly stuck in Earth's orbit.

Russian engineers have since clarified that they have three days to correct the problem before the craft's batteries run out.

Codenamed "grunt" (soil in Russian) the craft was the agency's most ambitious mission in years. Grunt was designed to travel to and collect samples from a 27 km-wide "Phobos" moon orbiting Mars.

Scientists had hoped that the samples would help shed light on the mysterious moon's origin, with many believing it may be an asteroid caught in Mars orbit.

The mission was doubly important as the craft was carrying China's first Mars satellite. Weighing in at 115kg, the Yinghuo-1 was planned to ride with Grunt to Mars, releasing it into an observation orbit once it arrived.

A spokesman for the Russian Space Agency has since clarified that scientists are working to fix grunt's engine failure and still hope to have the samples back on Earth within three year's time

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Mars Phobos mission: Tough astronaut bugs to blast off

A ragtag group of rugged travellers is sent on a three-year round trip to a desolate moon that might be the site of a future human outpost in space.

No, that's not a pitch for a reality show – it's a description of an experiment called LIFE (Living Interplanetary Flight Experiment) that is scheduled to set off for the larger of Mars's two moons, Phobos, on 8 November, from Baikonur, Kazakhstan.

The travellers are not celebrities, but some of Earth's toughest organisms, including the bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans and water bears – tiny invertebrates that can survive extreme temperatures and the vacuum of space in low-Earth orbitMovie Camera.

The brainchild of the non-profit Planetary Society of Pasadena, California, LIFE will pack 10 such hardy organisms inside a container the size of a hockey puck and then hitch a ride aboard Russia's Phobos-Grunt (Phobos-Soil) spacecraft.

LIFE will test an idea called transpermia, in which organisms "could be ejected off one planet in impacts, travel through space inside rocks, then be deposited on another world", says Bruce Betts, LIFE's lead scientist. Phobos-Grunt "will act as a simulated rock carrying life between planets".

If the organisms survive, it would strengthen the idea that life on Earth might have come from other planets, or has travelled to other planets.

Phobos lies far beyond Earth's protective magnetosphere, so LIFE should provide a glimpse of what happens when organisms are not shielded from many of the damaging charged particles from the sun and other sources.

While organisms taken to the moon on Apollo missions went beyond the magnetosphere, it was only for a few days at a time. LIFE should expose its organisms to the radiation and temperatures of space for three years.

Like a reality show, LIFE has stirred up controversy. "What happens if the mission crashes and the microbes are allowed to get loose?" asks Rocco Mancinelli, an astrobiologist at the Bay Area Environmental Research Institute in Moffett Field, California.

"Then you have potentially ruined your chances for looking at the origin of organic material or potentially life forms" on Phobos, he says.

That is essentially true for any missions studying Phobos-Grunt's landing site with on-board instruments, says Catharine Conley, NASA's planetary protection officer, who is charged with ensuring that agency projects do not contaminate other solar system bodies with terrestrial life.

"It would be difficult to convince anyone that detected organics were not released from the spacecraft," she says.

For missions returning samples back to Earth for more detailed analysis, it may be possible to identify any contamination from the mission.

"If one measured the isotope ratios, those would have characteristics of Earth organisms," Conley says.

ESA Soyuz: Six Astrium satellites on the same flight

The launching of six satellites in a single flight has been made possible thanks to the payload support structure developed at the Astrium site in Barajas, near Madrid.

Astrium is prime contractor for all six satellites to be launched in mid-December by the second Soyuz launcher to lift off from the Kourou spaceport in French Guiana.

The Pleiades 1 Very High Resolution (VHR) Earth observation satellite recently left Astrium's site in Toulouse for Kourou.

The four satellites of the Elisa constellation and the Chilean satellite SSOT arrived in Kourou on October 21.

This will be the first time that six satellites developed by Astrium are launched simultaneously.

Pleiades 1 is the first of two very high-resolution satellites manufactured by Astrium in Toulouse for CNES (the French Space Agency).

It will be joined in space by its twin, Pleiades 2, in approximately one year's time.

Once in orbit, each satellite will provide the French and Spanish defence ministries, and civilian users, with Very High Resolution (VHR) optical satellite imagery coupled with major operational advances.

They offer incomparable image acquisition capacity, remarkable agility (rapid area targeting) for multiple target modes (stereo, mosaics, corridor or target) and excellent operational flexibility.

At an altitude of 700 km, the Pleiades constellation will be capable, after processing, to provide 50-cm resolution products with a swath width of 20 km.

The four satellites for the ELISA demonstrator are developed jointly by Astrium Satellites and Thales Systemes Aeroportes for the French ministry of defence procurement agency (DGA) and CNES.

LISA will demonstrate spaceborne capabilities to map and characterise radar emissions from all around the globe. The four satellites are also based on the Myriade platform.


SSOT (Sistema Satelital para la Observacion de la Tierra) is the most recent space-based Earth observation system exported by Astrium, the world's number one exporter in the field.

Ordered by Chile in late 2008, SSOT is based on two product families: the Myriade platform developed in cooperation with the CNES, and Naomi optical instruments, made of silicon carbide and used with success by Astrium for many other optical imagery missions.


The launching of six satellites in a single flight has been made possible thanks to the payload support structure developed at the Astrium site in Barajas, near Madrid.

Sunday, October 30, 2011

Soyuz Progress cargo ship burns up in Earth's atmosphere

Mike Fossum (@Astro_Aggie): I Enjoy this picture taken from the ISS, of the Soyuz Progress cargo ship burning up in the atmosphere.

The Soyuz docking station on the ISS is now standing vacant and awaits the arrival of the new Progress supply vessel, launched today 29th Oct 2011.

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Russian Space Agency names next crew to ISS

The Russian Space Agency Roscosmos confirmed on Monday the list of next crew members who will fly to the International Space Station (ISS) on Nov. 14.

Russia's Soyuz TMA-22 spacecraft will bring Russian cosmonauts Anton Shkaplerov and Anatoly Ivanishin and American astronaut Daniel Burbank to the ISS for a 124-day-long mission.

Russia's Gennady Padalka and Sergei Revin and American Josef Akaba are announced as the backup crew.

According to the Roscosmos, the new crew will host one manned and three unmanned cargo ships during their stay in the ISS and conduct a space walk as well as 37 scientific experiments.

During the new crew's stay, the ISS would also make its 75,000th revolution around the Earth, the Roscosmos said.

The launch of the Soyuz TMA-22 was initially scheduled on Sept. 22, but was postponed after the failed launch of the Progress cargo ship to the ISS on Aug. 24.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

NASA Expedition 29 Crew: Launch slated for Nov 14, 2011

Image above: Expedition 29 crew members pictured from the left on the front row are Commander Mike Fossum and Flight Engineer Dan Burbank. 

Pictured from the left on the back row are Flight Engineers Satoshi Furukawa, Sergei Volkov, Anatoly Ivanishin and Anton Shkaplerov. Photo credit: NASA

Mike Fossum commands the Expedition 29 crew which will continue to support research into the effects of microgravity on the human body, biology, physics and materials.

Fossum and Flight Engineers Sergei Volkov and Satoshi Furukawa launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome on June 7 aboard the Soyuz TMA-02M spacecraft, docking their Soyuz to the Rassvet module on the Russian segment of the station on June 9.

According to the current plan, the Soyuz 28 spacecraft, carrying NASA's Dan Burbank and Russia's Anatoly Ivanishin and Anton Shkaplerov, will launch Nov. 14 from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan and arrive at the station on Nov. 16.

› Read more about Expedition 29 on NASA portal

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

ESA live event: Paolo Nespoli and Cady Coleman at ESA/ESRIN

ESA Astronaut Paolo Nespoli and US astronaut Cady Coleman will be visiting ESA's ESRIN facility in Frascati, near Rome, Italy.

Also known to Twitter followers as @Astro_Paolo and @Astro_Cady

In this image taken on the ISS by Ron Garan, Paolo Nespoli and Cady Coleman give a final wave before entering the Soyuz TMA-20 spacecraft for their return to Earth after nearly 6 months in the International Space Station, 23 May 2011.

Credits: NASA

Sunday, June 5, 2011

Expedition 28 Soyuz Rollout

Large gantry mechanisms on either side of the Soyuz TMA-02M spacecraft are raised into position to secure the rocket at the launch pad on Sunday, June 5, 2011 at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.

Photo Credit: (NASA/Carla Cioffi)

View Carla Cioffi's Flickr of NASA Photostream here