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Showing posts with label Space. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Space. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Failed Russian Mars Probe Set to Crash in Indian Ocean

An artist's impression of Phobos-Grunt in Mars orbit.

Russia's failed Mars probe will come splashing down to Earth in the Indian Ocean between Jan. 14 and Jan. 16, the Roscosmos space agency said Wednesday.
The unmanned Phobos-Grunt spacecraft blasted off toward the Red Planet in November, where it was hoped to bring back rock and soil samples from the moon Phobos. But its engines failed to put in the correct course, and the craft only managed to reach an orbit about 125 miles (200 kilometers) from Earth.
Since then, scientists have been trying to establish when it is likely to crash down, and where.
The scatter zone was most likely above the Indian Ocean, and as many as 20 to 30 fragments could hit Earth, Roscosmos said.
Previously, Roscosmos head Vladimir Popovkin said the probe would break up in the atmosphere, the Ria Novosti news agency reported.
The failed mission has been an embarrassment to Roscosmos, which has suffered a string of failures. Popovkin earlier in the week hinted that rival space powers may have been to blame for the failure of the Phobos probe.
"I don't want to make any accusations, but at present, there are powerful technologies that can impact spacecraft, and their usage cannot be ruled out," Popovkin said.
Source: Fox News

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Russia's Phobos-Grunt probe heads for fiery finale

Named after the bellicose god of war, Mars has claimed many a victim, and the latest one, a Russian space probe, looks likely to tumble to Earth very soon.
Launched Nov. 8 from Kazakhstan, Russia's Phobos-Grunt (grunt is Russian for ground or soil) mission aimed for a first landing of a probe on the martian moon, Phobos. The $163 million spacecraft also carried a piggybacked Chinese Mars orbiter added late to the mission, and a Planetary Society microbe experiment.
Sadly, the spacecraft reached orbit around Earth but failed to fire the rocket that would send it on an eight-month interplanetary trip. The cause of the failure is the subject of an open investigation by Russian space officials.
"Way too ambitious, and way too underfunded, to reach its goal," says space law attorney Michael Listner, a writer forThe Space Review. "Adding the Chinese orbiter late seems to have pushed the risk to the mission very, very high."

Monday, December 26, 2011

Twin Probes to Orbit Moon, Study Gravity Field

This undated artist rendering provided by NASA shows the twin Grail spacecraft mapping the lunar gravity field.
The moon has come a long way since Galileo first peered at it through a telescope. Unmanned probes have circled around it and landed on its surface. Twelve American astronauts have walked on it. And lunar rocks and soil have been hauled back from it.
Despite being well studied, Earth's closest neighbor remains an enigma.
Over the New Year's weekend, a pair of spacecraft the size of washing machines are set to enter orbit around it in the latest lunar mission. Their job is to measure the uneven gravity field and determine what lies beneath -- straight down to the core.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Space shuttle Discovery landing marks beginning of the end

The space shuttle Discovery lands at Kennedy Space Centre after returning for the last time from space. Photograph: Joe Raedle/Getty Images
The space shuttle Discovery has ended its career as the world's most flown spaceship, returning from orbit for the last time and taking off in a new direction as a museum piece.
After a flawless trip to the International Space Station, Nasa's oldest shuttle swooped through a few wispy clouds on its way to its final touchdown.
"To the ship that has led the way time and time again, we say, 'Farewell Discovery'," declared Mission Control commentator Josh Byerly.
When it landed three minutes before noon EST (5pm GMT), Discovery ceased being a reusable spaceship.
"For the final time: wheels stop," commander Steven Lindsey called out when the shuttle rolled to a stop. He was the last of the six crew members to climb out of the shuttle.
Dozens of Nasa officials – flight directors, launch managers, former astronauts – joined the crew on the runway to admire the shuttle and pose for pictures.
"It's a pretty bittersweet moment for all of us," Lindsey said. "As the minutes pass, I'm actually getting sadder and sadder about this being the last flight."
Even after shuttles Endeavour and Atlantis make their final voyages in the coming months, Discovery will still hold the all-time record with 39 missions, 148 million miles (238 million kilometres), 5,830 orbits of Earth, and 365 days spent in space. All that was achieved in under 27 years.
Discovery now leads the way to retirement as Nasa winds down the 30-year shuttle programme in favour of interplanetary travel.
Nasa estimates it will take several months of work – removing the three main engines and draining all hazardous fuels – before Discovery is ready to head to the Smithsonian Institution. It will make the 750m (1,200km) journey strapped to the top of a jumbo jet.
Throughout the flight, Lindsey and his crew marvelled at how well Discovery was performing. They noted that the spacecraft was going into retirement still "at the top of her game".
Discovery's last mission unfolded smoothly despite a four-month grounding for fuel tank repairs and a liftoff on 24 February in the last two seconds of the countdown.
"It came back as perfect on its final flight as it did on its first flight," Lindsey said.
Perhaps more than any other shuttle, Discovery consistently delivered.
It made its debut in 1984 following shuttles Columbia and Challenger, dispatched the Hubble Space Telescope in 1990, flew the first shuttle rendezvous to Russia's Mir space station and carried the first female shuttle pilot in 1995, and gave another ride into space to John Glenn, the first American to orbit the Earth, in 1998.
It got Nasa flying again, in 1988 and 2005, following the Challenger and Columbia disasters. And it flew 13 times to the space station, more than any other craft. On its last trip, it delivered a new storage compartment packed with supplies and a humanoid robot.
"You're sad to see her be retired, but at the same time, it's really a pride thing. We got her back OK. It was a beautiful mission," said Ken Smith, a Boeing propulsion manager who monitored the shuttle's systems from the landing strip.
But he added: "We've got two more to fly."
The Discovery astronauts took several minutes to go through the long receiving line on the runway. Nasa's boss, Charles Bolden, a former shuttle commander who twice flew Discovery, led the welcoming party and called it "an absolutely incredible flight." Earlier in the morning, he joined about 50 local eighth-graders eager to see history in the making.
Bolden will announce the final homes for Endeavour and Atlantis on 12 April – 30 years to the day that Columbia soared on the first shuttle flight.
Nasa planned to move Endeavour out to the launch pad Wednesday night for its 19 April liftoff, but delayed the trip until Thursday because bad weather was expected. The mission will be commanded by Mark Kelly, the husband of Gabrielle Giffords the US congresswoman who was shot and wounded in Arizona. His identical twin brother Scott is currently the skipper of the space station; he returns to Earth next week on a Russian Soyuz spacecraft.
Atlantis is slated to make its last trip at the end of June.
Nasa is under presidential direction to spread its wings beyond low-Earth orbit. The goal is to send astronauts to an asteroid and then Mars in the decades ahead. There is not enough money for Nasa to achieve that and maintain the shuttle programme at the same time. As a result, the shuttles will stop flying this summer after 30 years.
American astronauts will keep hitching rides to the space station on Russian capsules, until private companies are able to provide a taxi service to and from orbit. Nasa expects to get another nine years out of the space station.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

Astronauts get to relax after 2 spacewalks

In this image provided by NASA the Italian-built Permanent Multipurpose Module in the grasp of the International Space Station's Canadarm2 is being transferred from space shuttle Discovery's payload bay to be permanently attached to the Earth-facing port of the station's Unity node Tuesday March 1, 2011. (AP Photo/NASA)

The Associated Press
Date: Thursday Mar. 3, 2011 6:29 AM ET
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The astronauts in orbit at the International Space Station are getting a break.
The two crews of the linked space shuttle and space station will get some precious time off Thursday afternoon. NASA officials say it's well deserved, following Wednesday's successful spacewalk.
Before relaxing, the astronauts will work on an air purifier aboard the space station.
Discovery will remain at the International Space Station until Sunday. That's a day longer than originally planned. Mission managers want the shuttle crew to help unload the newly installed storage unit. There's a possibility the astronauts may get yet another bonus day in orbit, which would stretch their mission to 13 days.
It's the final voyage for NASA's oldest shuttle.

Source:  www.ctv.ca

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Discovery Astronauts Gear Up for Second Spacewalk

Two astronauts will venture outside the International Space Station Wednesday on the last spacewalk of their mission, this time to perform some leftover maintenance work.
Discovery shuttle astronauts Steve Bowen and Alvin Drew are slated to don their bulky NASA-issue spacesuits and float outside of the station's Quest airlock at 10:18 a.m. EST (1518 GMT). It's the second and final spacewalk of the mission – Discovery's last spaceflight before being retired.
To distinguish themselves for NASA cameras, Bowen will wear a spacesuit with red stripes while Drew will wear a solid white spacesuit. The excursion is expected to last approximately 6 1/2 hours.
Bowen and Drew successfully completed their mission's first spacewalk on Monday (Feb. 28) to install a power extension cable and move a faulty cooling pump module from a temporary attachment bracket to a storage platform on the station's exterior.
For today's outing, one of the major tasks will be to vent about 10 pounds of residual ammonia from inside the defunct cooling pump. The ammonia pump broke down in the summer, and was replaced during a series of emergency spacewalks conducted by two space station astronauts during a previous spacewalk. [Inside and Out: The International Space Station] Read more...
Source: www.guardian.co.uk

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Space station getting extra storage room

In this Feb 26, 2011 NASA image photographed by an Expedition 26 crew member, the space shuttle Discovery is seen against a cloud-covered part of Earth. (AP Photo/NASA)
The Associated Press
Date: Tuesday Mar. 1, 2011 6:42 AM ET
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — The International Space Station is getting an extra storage room.
Space shuttle Discovery delivered the new compartment over the weekend.
The orbiting astronauts will install the 21-foot-long chamber Tuesday morning. It's loaded with supplies as well as a humanoid robot that will be tested as a potential astronaut helper.
The Italian-built chamber is named Leonardo, after Leonardo da Vinci. It flew seven times to the space station as a temporary cargo carrier. This time, it's staying.
Discovery's last flight will last an extra day. Mission Control radioed up the news following Monday's spacewalk. The 12-day mission will now end next Tuesday. Once Discovery lands, it will be retired and put in a museum.


Thursday, February 24, 2011

Space shuttle Discovery fueled for final flight

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — NASA's most traveled space shuttle, Discovery, was fueled for an afternoon liftoff Thursday on its final voyage after nearly three decades of service.
NASA began pumping hundreds of thousands of gallons of fuel into Discovery shortly after sunrise, as the six astronauts assigned to the space station delivery mission sat down for breakfast at crew quarters. It was their second stab at this. November's launch attempt never made it past fueling.
Launch manager Mike Moses said everything finally looked to be coming together and noted it was a good day to give it a good shot. Even the weather was looking up: the forecast improved to 90 percent "go" for the 4:50 p.m. liftoff.
This time, NASA was confident no hydrogen gas would leak and no cracks would develop in the external fuel tank. Both problems cropped up during the initial countdown in November, and the repairs took almost four months. The cracks in the midsection of the tank, which holds instruments but no fuel, could have been dangerous.
Discovery will head to the International Space Station with the crew, as well as a load of supplies and a humanoid robot.
This will be the 39th flight for Discovery, set to become the first of the three surviving space shuttles to be retired this year and sent to a museum. It has since logged 143 million miles since its first flight in 1984.
NASA expects 40,000 guests on hand for Discovery's farewell launch, including a small contingent from Congress. Watching with special interest from Mission Control in Houston will be astronaut Timothy Kopra, who was supposed to be the flight's lead spacewalker. He was hurt in a bicycle crash last month and was replaced by Stephen Bowen, who will become the first astronaut to fly back-to-back shuttle missions.
Well before dawn, recreational vehicles lined nearby roads offering the best views of liftoff. Signs outside businesses and government offices in the neighboring towns of Cape Canaveral and Cocoa Beach offered words of encouragement. "The heavens await Discovery," one church proclaimed. Local grocery stores stocked up on extra red, white and blue cakes adorned with shuttle pictures.
Launch director Mike Leinbach noted that it would be bittersweet to see Discovery soar one last time. It will be even tougher to see the oldest surviving shuttle land, he said.
"The emotion will really hit on the runway after the mission is complete," Leinbach told reporters on the eve of launch.
Discovery will spend 11 days in orbit — on top of the 352 days it's already spent circling the planet — and will rack up another 4.5 million miles.
Its list of achievements include delivering the Hubble Space Telescope to orbit, carrying the first Russian cosmonaut to launch on a U.S. spaceship, returning Mercury astronaut John Glenn to orbit, and bringing shuttle flights back to life after the Challenger and Columbia accidents.
"She's been an amazing machine," Leinbach said. "She's done everything we've asked of her."
Heading up Discovery's veteran crew is retired Air Force Col. Steven Lindsey. Two of his crew actually lived on the space station in 2009. During the 11-day flight, they will deliver and install a closet-like compartment full of space station supplies — made in Italy and named Leonardo for il Signor da Vinci.
Packed inside the compartment is Robonaut 2, or R2, set to become the first humanoid robot in space. The experimental machine — looking human from the waist up — will remain boxed until after Discovery departs.
Up at the space station, meanwhile, the six-person crew got ready to receive a European cargo ship launched last week from French Guiana. It was due to dock at midmorning, and launch officials were keeping abreast of the events unfolding 220 miles up. A smooth hookup would clear Discovery for launch.
NASA is under presidential direction to retire the shuttle fleet this summer, let private companies take over trips to orbit and focus on getting astronauts to asteroids and Mars. There's been considerable disagreement among lawmakers and the space community on how best to accomplish this.
"Godspeed Discovery," retired space shuttle program manager Wayne Hale said in a Twitter update Thursday. "Prayers for a safe flight and wisdom for decision makers."

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Help Buy a Satellite from a Bankrupt Telecom to Beam Free Web to the Developing World

Increasing web connectivity in the developing world has been a focus of philanthropists, international bodies like the U.N., and individual states alike. But, like most grand visions, wiring entire countries for the Web is expensive. So how does a philanthropist sidestep the massive expense of building and launching a satellite that can beam Internet to remote regions of the world? You wait for a company to go bankrupt, then you buy their brand new communications satellite already in orbit on the cheap.
At least, that’s the idea. A philanthropic group called Ahumanright.org (universal Internet is that human right) has launched a site called “Buy This Satellite” that aims to raise $150,000 to bid for Terrastar-1, a school-bus-sized satellite launched in 2008. Terrastar-1 is currently in orbital limbo, so to speak, after its owner filed for bankruptcy. The group will also invest in the development of an open source, low cost modem for use in the developing world.
Once acquired, the group hopes to park the satellite over a developing country or countries--Papua New Guinea, the site points out, has an open orbital slot and only 2.1 percent of its population is online--and allow its citizens access to the Web for free. That, theoretically, will help educate the population, open up new avenues for commerce, and otherwise provide lagging economies with all the technological advantages offered to the wired world.
There are plenty of aspects of the plan that seem easy to poke holes in. For one, satellites generally go for more than $150,000 (even at a bankruptcy auction). And the phase one plan calls for hiring several full-time engineers for the project, but that'll cost $50,000 per year per engineer (and that's only if the engineers are content to work on the cheap)--well, you can see why we might be a bit skeptical.
However, the notion is both noble and ambitious, and we’re all about nobility and ambition. If the money can be found, a project like this has the power to seriously affect change in places where connectivity is scarce (if it’s available at all). Go to buythissatellite.org to do your part to purchase

Robonaut 2 Sentenced to Additional Month In Crate

NASA has just announced it will postpone the 39th and final launch of space shuttle Discovery until November 30 at the earliest, after a hydrogen gas leak stalled this afternoon’s scheduled liftoff.
Meanwhile, Robonaut, who was supposed to start his career as the first humanoid robot in space this week, remains shut in his custom SLEEPR crate while the shuttle sorts out its problems.
Technicians assessing the leak found in an external fuel tank this morning also discovered a foam crack on the tank’s liquid oxygen intertank flange, prompting NASA to delay the launch so they can fix the damage and assess possible causes.
Since November 8 marks the end of this window of acceptable solar angles amenable to Discovery's launch, NASA must wait until the next launch window, from November 30 through December 5, to begin the 11-day mission.



Robonaut 2, Prepared for Launch with Protective Koozies in Place, Waits for Discovery To Get Its Act Together Photo courtesy of NASA

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