|
1 members (Webmaster),
556
guests, and
32
robots. |
Key:
Admin,
Global Mod,
Mod
|
S |
M |
T |
W |
T |
F |
S |
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
10
|
11
|
12
|
13
|
14
|
15
|
16
|
17
|
18
|
19
|
20
|
21
|
22
|
23
|
24
|
25
|
26
|
27
|
28
|
29
|
30
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
There are no members with birthdays on this day. |
#3622
Sun 01 Jan 2006 07:20:PM
|
Joined: Feb 2001
Posts: 3,536
Mission Commander
|
OP
Mission Commander
Joined: Feb 2001
Posts: 3,536 |
Jonathan's Space Report<br />No. 559 2005 Dec 29, Somerville, MA<br />-------------------------------------------------------------------------------<br />Sender: owner-jsr@host.planet4589.org<br />Precedence: bulk<br />Reply-To: jcm@host.planet4589.org@host.planet4589.org<br /><br />After a month without orbital launches, Dec 21 saw three orbital<br />launches on a single day (as well as a suborbital Russian submarine<br />missile launch). By Dec 29 Russia had launched eight satellites within<br />eight days, repeating a familiar Russian operational pattern of a late<br />November launch gap followed by a flurry of activity at the end of<br />December before the new year holiday. <br /><br />Progress M-55<br />-------------<br /><br />The robot cargo spaceship Progress M No. 355 was launched as mission<br />Progress M-55, ISS flight 20P, on a Soyuz-U from Baykonur. The 7-tonne<br />craft docked with the Station's Pirs module at 1946 UTC on Dec 23. <br />The previous cargo craft, Progress M-54, will remain docked to the<br />Zvezda module until March. Soyuz TMA-7 is docked to Zarya.<br /><br />Gonets<br />------<br /><br /><br />A Gonets-D1M ('messenger') low orbit communications satellite was<br />launched on a light Kosmos-3M rocket on Dec 21 into a 1440 x 1450 km x<br />82.5 deg orbit. Gonets-D1M (or Gonets-M) is the civilian version of the<br />military Strela-3 low orbit communications constellation. The launch<br />also carried a military satellite called Rodnik, with cover name<br />Kosmos-2416. I don't know anything about Rodnik - the best guess is<br />that it is an upgrade of the Strela-3. The Strela-3, originally flown in<br />groups of six on the retired Tsiklon rocket, has been launched in pairs<br />on Kosmos-3M since 2002 to the same orbit, so it makes sense that this<br />is another pair of Strela-3 buses but with improved payloads.<br /><br /><br />Ariane 5<br />--------<br /><br />Arianespace continues its string of successes with the launch of Ariane<br />vehicle 525, a standard (5GS) model with the EPS upper stage. It put<br />the Insat-4A and MSG-2 satellites in orbit. The EPC core stage reached<br />a 44 x 1702 km x 6.5 deg transatmospheric orbit and reentered<br />over the Pacific. The EPS stage made a single burn to 620 x 35853 km x 3.9 deg<br />and released the two satellites and the Sylda adapter.<br /><br />Insat-4A is the first of a new series of Indian communications satellites.<br />Built at ISAC/Bangalore, it is a 3081 kg (full; 1385 kg dry) satellite<br />with Ku-band and C-band transponders. The Insat 4 series are slightly<br />heavier than the Insat 2 and Insat 3 satellites they are replacing,<br />but represent an enhancement rather than a new bus. Insat 4A made<br />three orbit raising burns and reached geostationary altitude over<br />the Indian Ocean at 0430 UTC on Dec 26, successfully deploying its solar arrays.<br /><br />MSG 2 (Meteosat Second Generation) is a spin-stabilized weather<br />satellite continuing the European Meteorological Satellite Organization<br />(EUMETSAT) series of Meteosat geostationary weather satellites; it will<br />become Meteosat 9 once operational. Launch mass is 2036 kg; dry mass is<br />around 1000 kg. After reaching geostationary drift orbit, two covers on<br />the SEVIRI telescope were ejected on Dec 29 over 30.4 deg E (at 0445 and<br />0500 UTC, according to Vladimir Agapov. Space Command has not cataloged<br />the two 1-meter covers ejected from MSG-1/Meteosat-8, so probably won't<br />see the ones from this launch either).<br /><br />Glonass<br />-------<br /><br />On Dec 25 Russia launched a Proton with the Block 34 launch of three<br />GLONASS navigation satellites; one Uragan, serial No. 798, and two<br />improved Uragan-M, serial number 713 and 714. They were given Kosmos<br />cover names. In recent years, GLONASS launches involved two of the old<br />Uragan and only one Uragan-M. <br /><br />Launch was by Proton serial number 410-12 according to the<br />federalspace.ru site; the satellites are in a 19110 x 19130 km x 64.8<br />deg orbit; the Proton third stage was tracked in a low parking orbit and<br />the Blok-DM2 fourth stage is in a 19072 x 19122 km x 64.9 deg orbit. Two<br />small ullage motors used to force fuel to the back of the tanks for the<br />DM2 second burn are thought to be in elliptical transfer orbit, but have<br />not yet been cataloged.<br /><br />Giove-A<br />-------<br /><br />On Dec 28 a Starsem Soyuz-FG rocket with a Fregat upper stage delivered<br />the 602 kg Surrey-built GIOVE-A satellite to orbit. GIOVE-A, the Galileo<br />In-Orbit Validation Element, is Europe's first navigation test satellite<br />and is a precursor to the Galileo system which will be the European<br />equivalent of GPS. GIOVE-A is owned and developed by the European Space<br />Agency, but the operational GNSS (Galileo Navigation Satellite System)<br />itself is a European Union project. GIOVE-A carries two rubidium <br />atomic clocks and a large L-band phased array antenna.<br /><br />The Soyuz-FG entered a mildly suborbital trajectory and its upper<br />stage fell in the Pacific. The first Fregat burn reached a roughly 220<br />km circular orbit, probably at 52 deg inclination; the second burn was<br />to a transfer orbit around 220 x 23200 km; and the third burn put<br />GIOVE-A in its initial 23011 x 23258 km x 56.05 deg orbit.<br />Unfortunately the Starsem press kit does not give details of the Fregat<br />rocket burns, so the details here are guesswork. The quoted target orbit<br />is 23616 km circular, easily within reach of GIOVE-A's butane propulsion<br />system.<br /><br />The three modern navigation satellite systems are quite similar: the<br />United States GPS satellites are in a 20140 x 20220 km x 55.0 deg orbit,<br />the Russian GLONASS system is in a 19120 x 19140 km x 64.8 deg orbit,<br />and the initial GIOVE planned orbit is 23616 x 23616 x 56.0 deg. All of<br />them transmit at L-band (1.5-1.6 GHz). Contrast this with the first<br />generation navsat systems, which used Doppler beacons instead of atomic<br />clock signals - the now-retired US Navy Transits operated at 1000 x 1200<br />km x 90.0 deg and the Russian Tsiklon/Parus/Tsikada continue in a 970 x<br />1010 km x 83.0 deg orbit, both using much lower frequencies around 0.15<br />MHz. The higher orbits mean fewer satellites, but stronger signals.<br /><br /><br />AMC 23<br />-------<br /><br />SES Global's 5035-kg AMC-23 was launched on Dec 29 by an International<br />Launch Services/Krunichev Proton-M No. 535-13 with a Briz-M upper stage<br />(No. 88514). AMC-23 is an Alcatel Alenia/Cannes Spacebus 4000C3 satellite<br />which was originally built as Americom 13, then Worldsat 3, and is now<br />to provide Ku-band and C-band multimedia and telecom services over the<br />Pacific. The C-band payload will be partly used by the Japanese JSAT<br />system. SES, based in Luxembourg, bought the old RCA (later GE) Americom<br />system in 2001. The Briz-M delivered the satellite to a 6193 x 35615 km<br />x 18.5 deg transfer orbit, leaving its secondary propellant tank in<br />a 311 x 15526 km x 49.6 deg intermediate orbit. The Proton third<br />stage was suborbital on this launch. AMC-23 will use its Astrium S400<br />apogee engine to reach geostationary orbit.<br /><br /><br />Table of Recent Launches<br />-----------------------<br /><br />Date UT Name Launch Vehicle Site Mission INTL. <br /> DES.<br />Nov 8 1407 Inmarsat 4F-2 Zenit-3SL Odyssey, POR Comms 44A<br />Nov 9 0333 Venus Express Soyuz-Fregat Baykonur LC31/6 Space probe 45A<br />Nov 16 2346 Spaceway 2 ) Ariane 5ECA Kourou ELA3 Comms 46A<br /> Telkom 2 ) Comms 46B<br />Dec 21 1838 Progress M-55 Soyuz-U Baykonur LC1/5 Cargo 47A<br />Dec 21 1934 Gonets-D1M ) Kosmos-3M Plesetsk LC132/1 Comms 48A<br /> Kosmos-2416 ) Comms 48B<br />Dec 21 2233 Insat 4A ) Ariane 5GS Kourou ELA3 Comms 49A<br /> MSG 2 ) Weather 49B<br />Dec 25 0507 Kosmos-2417 ) Proton-K/DM2 Baykonur LC81/23 Navigation 50A<br /> Kosmos-2418 ) Navigation 50B<br /> Kosmos-2419 ) Navigation 50C<br />Dec 28 0519 GIOVE A Soyuz-FG/Fregat Baykonur LC31/6 Navigation 51A <br />Dec 29 0228 AMC 23 Proton-M/Briz-M Baykonur LC200/39 Comms 52A<br /><br /><br />.-------------------------------------------------------------------------.<br />| Jonathan McDowell | phone : (617) 495-7176 |<br />| Somerville MA 02143 | inter : jcm@host.planet4589.org |<br />| USA | jcm@cfa.harvard.edu |<br />| |<br />| JSR: http://www.planet4589.org/jsr.html |<br />| Back issues: http://www.planet4589.org/space/jsr/back |<br />| Subscribe/unsub: mail majordomo@host.planet4589.org, (un)subscribe jsr | <br />'-------------------------------------------------------------------------'
|
|
CMS The Best Conveyancing solicitors conveyancing quotes throughout the UK
For any webhosting enquiries please email webmaster@aus-city.com
|
Forums60
Topics690,664
Posts725,278
Members2,957
|
Most Online4,158 Jun 21st, 2024
|
|
|
|
Copyright 1996 - 2024 by David Cottle. Designed by David Bate Jr. All Rights Reserved.
By using this forum, the user agrees not to transfer any data or technical information received under the agreement, to any other entity without the express approval of the AUS-CITY Forum Admins and/or authors of individual posts (Forum Admins and DoD/USSPACECOM for the analysis of satellite tracking data).
Two-line elements (TLE) and all other satellite data presented and distributed via this forum and e-mail lists of AUS-CITY are distributed with permission from DoD/USSTRATCOM.
Reprise Hosting
|
|