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    Russian Space Program: News & Discussion #1

    Mike E
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    Post  Mike E Thu Sep 18, 2014 8:01 pm

    Moon bases, orbit cleaners and rockets to Mars: Russia’s most ambitious space projects 

    This summer, the Russian Space Agency (Rosсosmos) announced a number of ambitious projects. RBTH has created a list of the most exciting and expensive ones. Of course, not all of these projects will be fully implemented in the future, but if they are, they could revolutionize space forever.

    1. Liquidator: The space janitor Humans haven’t conquered space yet, but they have already managed to pollute it. According to the US Space Surveillance Network there are more than 16,200 loose objects orbiting the earth, which has the potential to destroy new space vehicles. There is a chance that the plot of the film Gravity, where two astronauts played by Sandra Bullock and George Clooney are stranded in space after the destruction of their shuttle, could come true. In August Roscosmos declared their plans to design a spacecraft for cleaning the geostationary orbit from spent satellites and LV upper stages. The project, called the Liquidator, is slated for development between 2018-2025 with a budget of roughly 10.8 billion rubles ($292 million).

    2. New cosmodromes: Roscosmos plans to spend 900 billion rubles ($24.3 billion) for infrastructure to support spaceports. These funds will be used to build an extension of the Plesetsk cosmodrome as well as to complete the construction of the Vostochny cosmodrome and to support the Baikonur space complex based in Kazakhstan. However, Roscosmos have come up with a more financially feasible option. If a dispute with Kazakhstan is resolved by 2020 the agency will be required to spend only 800 billion rubles ($21,6  billion). In that case, Roscosmos will be able to use Baikonur, as well as Russian cosmodromes. In that case 100 billion rubles ($2.7 billion) will be freed up to devote to the Vostochny space complex.

    3. Remote sensing of the earth: The remote sensing of the earth is one of the Russian space industry’s weakest areas. With no national program in place, Russian scientists have to rely on information from international satellites. But a Federal Space Program (FSP) is slated for development between 2016-2025 and was created by resilient optimists promising to enlarge the orbital fleet by adding 26 hi-tech satellites at a cost of 358.6 billion ($9.7 billion). The different projects within the FSP include (with projected costs in parentheses): 

    Meteo-SSO, a global hydrometeorological and heliophysical system consisting of four new generation satellites to travel on sun synchronous orbits (66 billion rubles / $1.8 billion). 

    Meteo-Glob, a global meteorological sensing system using visible and infrared bands (86.9 billion rubles / $2.3 billion). Resurs, a three-satellite program designed to capture images of the Earth in high and ultra-high resolution (55 billion rubles / $1.5 billion). 

    ES-SSO is an operating supervision space system for local emergency situations. It is composed of 10 satellites that orbit in synchronicity with the sun (106.3 billion rubles / $2.9 billion). 

    ES-GSO is a high-operating supervision space system for major emergency situations. It functions on an optical and radar band on a geostationary orbit (44.3 billion rubles / $1.2 billion).

    4. Moon-base: Russian spacecraft were the first to fly over the dark side of the Moon and take soil samples, but they never managed to put a person on its surface. Roscosmos is currently quite serious about moon exploration. The Agency is slated to spend $280 million on the development of a moon base, a mobile manipulator crane, a grader, an excavator, a cable layer and a mobile robot for lunar surface exploration between 2018-2025. It appears that Roscosmos wants to be more than just a guest, but a full time resident.

    5. Moon-Mobile: A moon base without a moon vehicle is kind of beside the point, thus Roscosmos is developing a new rover that will search for natural resources. The Moon is full of resources, such as rare earth elements, titanium, and uranium, which the Earth does not have in abundant supply. It is also rich in helium-3, which is a possible fuel for nuclear fusion. This new moon vehicle is called Moon-Mobile. Development should conclude by 2021, with testing lasting another four years.

    6. Super-heavy rocket to Mars: In September 2014 plans for a super-heavy rocket with a120-150 ton capacity received preliminary approval by President Vladimir Putin. This rocket is one of the most expensive of Roscosmos’ ideas and its budget is twice as large as the Angara rocket, a popular spacecraft currently in use. The goal of the rocket is to fly it to Mars; NASA has a similar rocket design under construction. The enormous budget undoubtedly makes this project a risky proposal.

    7. Spectr-RG for the exploration of black holes: In 2013 the Russian-German high-energy astrophysics observatory Spectr-RG was ready to be launched with the purpose of exploring galactic clusters and black holes with the eROSITA Roentgen telescope. While the idea has been in existence since the late 1980s, the project was only restarted in 2005, requiring $135 million. The project was put on hold several times because of delays from the German telescope developers. The observatory should be ready by 2017.


    Source: Russia Beyond the Headlines - http://rbth.com/science_and_tech/2014/09/18/moon_bases_orbit_cleaners_and_rockets_to_mars_russias_most_a_39879.html)
    Mike E
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    Post  Mike E Fri Sep 19, 2014 8:16 pm

    - Just to let all know, there is more on what George1 posted on in the "lifters and spacecraft" thread.
    Mike E
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    Post  Mike E Sat Sep 20, 2014 8:49 pm

    I bear some bad news....

    Soviet cosmonaut Berezovoy dies at age of 72

    Berezovoy was the commander of the first resident crew at the Soviet Salyut-7 orbiting station in 1982


    MOSCOW, September 20. /ITAR-TASS/. Soviet cosmonaut Anatoly Berezovoy died on Saturday at the age of 72, the Federal Space Agency (Roscosmos) said.
    Berezovoy was the commander of the first resident crew at the Soviet Salyut-7 orbiting station in 1982.
    On July 30 of the same year he and his colleague Valentin Lebedev made a spacewalk, staying in outer space for 2 hours and 33 minutes.
    Their mission aboard the station was a record long one at that time - 211 days.
    Berezovoy was “a member of a legendary generation of cosmonauts, a man of great will and courage, a top-class professional who did so much for the development of cosmonautics and major research projects”, Roscosmos Head Oleg Ostapenko said.

    May he rest in peace. cry
    Mike E
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    Post  Mike E Mon Sep 22, 2014 8:13 pm

    Saratov scientists develop geomagnetic navigation technology alternative to GPS, GLONASS

    "The geomagnetic navigation system may be indispensable, for example, in the event of disappearance of a satellite signal," Alexander Ignatyev from the Institute of Critical Technologies says

    SARATOV, September 22. /ITAR-TASS/. Saratov scientists have developed the first domestic geomagnetic field navigation technology system that may become an alternative to the currently existing satlellite-aided navigation systems GPS and GLONASS, Alexander Ignatyev, head of the design bureau at the Institute of Critical Technologies, told ITAR-TASS on Monday.
    "The geomagnetic navigation system may be indispensable, for example, in the event of disappearance of a satellite signal. From the viewpoint of orientation accuracy, our (newly-developed) system is up to the selfsame GLONASS," Ignatyev emphasized. Valery Anikin, Dean of the Physic Department at Saratov University, stressed, "This does not refer to an assumption that one of systems would edge another one out. However, from the safety point of view, it is better for them to co-exist and mutually complement one another if, for example, something happens with communications satellites".
    The development of geomagnetic navigation systems is one of upcoming trends of research, Anikin pointed out. The Saratov school of magnetoelectronics has a long record. This is why it is no wonder that a practical development of a new navigation system is under way precisely over here," he said. Ignatyev said that the uniqueness of the project is in the fact that both navigation technology and software are developed domestically. A number of technical solutions have been patented by the researchers. The first experimental specimen of a (geomagnetic) navigator has been brought into being as well. The specimen is "bulky enough so far. However, we visualize the possibility to reduce it in size by several orders of magnitude. For this to be done, it is necessary that firms which manufacture components evince interest in the technology," the development engineer maintains. The prospect for a geomagnetic navigation device appearing on the commercial market is estimated by development engineers at several years. Similar systems are now also under development in foreign countries. A geomagnetic navigation system exists in the animal kingdom as well. Researchers believe, in particular that the sense of terrestrial magnetic field helps birds and butterflies migrate to places of their permanent wintering.
    Mike E
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    Post  Mike E Tue Sep 23, 2014 4:12 pm

    Rocket with Soyuz piloted spaceship to be launched to ISS September 25

    The spaceship will deliver crewmembers of the next ISS long-term expedition, including a Russian woman cosmonaut for the first time in the last 20 years, to the ISS

    MOSCOW, September 23. /ITAR-TASS/. Soyuz-FG booster with Soyuz TMA-14M piloted spaceship is to be launched at 8:25 pm UTC on Thursday, September 25, to the International Space Station (ISS). In the few days remaining before the launch specialists will make final checks of the rocket and the spaceship and will fuel the launch vehicle. “The delivery and putting the rocket with Soyuz TMA-14M spaceship docked to it on the launching pad were made as scheduled,” the press service of Russian Space Agency told ITAR-TASS.
    The spaceship will deliver crewmembers of the next ISS long-term expedition, including a Russian woman cosmonaut for the first time in the last 20 years, to the ISS.
    The resident ISS crew includes Russian cosmonauts Alexander Samokutyaev and Yelena Serova, NASA astronaut Barry Wilmore; the backup crew is made of Russian cosmonauts Gennady Padalka and Mikhail Kornienko as well as American astronaut Scott Kelly. On Wednesday, the state committee will determine finally the line-up of a crew who will fly to the ISS.
    Mike E
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    Post  Mike E Tue Sep 23, 2014 4:41 pm

    First Proton Carrier Rocket Installed on Launch Pad After May Accident

    MOSCOW, September 23 (RIA Novosti) – The carrier rocket Proton-M with the Luch spacecraft onboard has been installed on the launch pad at the Baikonur space center, Khrunichev State Research and Production Space Center representative told RIA Novosti on Tuesday.
    "The State Commission has made a decision to move out and install the rocket Proton-M with the Breeze-M upper stage and Luch spacecraft on the launch pad," he said.
    The Proton-M has been installed in a vertical position on the launch pad and the work plan for the next few days includes equipment checks and fueling the carrier rocket with propellant components and compressed gases.
    The launch of the Luch spacecraft is scheduled for September 28. This will be the fifthProton launch of 2014.
    The Luch was designed and manufactured by JSC Information Satellite Systems, Reshetnev Company.
    Launched on May 16, from Baikonur, the Proton-M carrier rocket collided with communications satellite Express АМ4R and burned up in the atmosphere above China.
    The Proton is the largest of Russia’s fleet of space launch vehicles, and has carried both government and commercial payloads.
    Mike E
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    Post  Mike E Tue Sep 23, 2014 10:32 pm

    Russia’s Proton-M carrier with Luch data relay satellite set to blast off on Sunday

    MOSCOW, September 23. /ITAR-TASS/. Russia’s Proton-M carrier rocket equipped with Briz-M booster and carrying data relay satellite Luch is scheduled to blast off from the Baikonur space center in Kazakhstan on September 28, the Khrunichev Space Centre said on Tuesday. According to the center, which manufactures Proton-series carrier rockets, the Proton-M was already installed on its launching pad in Kazakhstan and was undergoing final preparations for its scheduled Sunday launch, which will be the first after an unsuccessful launch in May. This May Russia’s Proton-M rocket with an Express-AM4R telecommunications satellite went down shortly after blasting off from the Baikonur space center in Kazakhstan. The rocket burned down in the thick layers of the atmosphere while the satellite after the Briz-M booster failed to separate from the spacecraft. Russia in recent years experienced a number of unsuccessful space launches. Prior to the May incident another Proton-M went down after the launch in 2013 failing to deliver three Glonass navigation satellites into orbit. Similar accidents happened in December 2010, in August 2011, and in August 2012.
    Failures also haunted the launches of other Russian carrier rockets: Rokot with a geodesy satellite in February 2011 and Soyuz-U, which failed to orbit a Progress spacecraft carrying a cargo for the International Space Station (ISS) in August of 2011. In November 2011, the Russian-Ukrainian Zenit-2SB rocket carrying the Fobos-Grunt space probe failed to reach the designated trajectory for its mission flight to Mars. The launch of a similar rocket carrying US telecommunications satellite Intelsat failed in February 2013.

    http://en.itar-tass.com/non-political/750926
    Mike E
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    Post  Mike E Tue Sep 23, 2014 10:34 pm

    First manned spaceship to be launched from Vostochny on time — deputy PM

    STAR CITY, September 23 /ITAR-TASS/. Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin said on Tuesday that the first manned spaceship would be launched from a new Vostochny space launch facility in the Russian Far East on time and without delay. “I would like to fix one very vital date which no one should call into question. I mean the year 2018 and the first manned launch from Vostochny (which is still under construction),” Rogozin told trainees at the space training center which he visited on Tuesday. The vice-premier who visits Vostochny, located near the town of Uglegrosk, at least once in three months has taken the construction works under personal control.
    President Putin visited Vostochny during his trip of the Urals, Siberia and the Far East in the first days of September. More than 400 facilities, including 120 launchers, an airfield with a 4,500-meter runway, more than 170 kilometers of railways and roads are to be built at Vostochny. The first launches are to start in 2015. The construction of launch facilities for the Angara rocket will get under way in 2016. Russia also plans to start launching manned spaceships from Vostochny in 2018.

    http://en.itar-tass.com/non-political/750924
    Mike E
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    Post  Mike E Wed Sep 24, 2014 3:19 am

    Russia to Launch Full-Scale Moon Exploration Next Decade

    ZVYOZDNY GORODOK (Moscow Region), September 23 (RIA Novosti) - Russia's space agency Roscosmos plans to launch a full-scale Moon exploration program in late 2020s or early 2030s, the agency’s head Oleg Ostapenko said on Tuesday.
    “We are planning to complete tests of a super-heavy carrier rocket and start full-scale Moon exploration at the end of the next decade. By that time, analysis of Moon surface data gathered by unmanned spacecraft will help to determine the best sites for lunar expeditions and Moon bases,” the Roscosmos head said.
    Preparatory work for lunar exploration missions have already started, according to Ostapenko.
    “We already started to work on a new manned spacecraft, which will be the first element of the prospective manned system together with new launch vehicles - heavy and super-heavy carrier rockets," the space agency’s chief added.
    The system is designed to deliver cargo and cosmonauts to the Moon, and eventually into the deep space, according to Ostapenko. The Moon exploration program will be carried out mostly as part of the Russian Federal Space Program for 2016-2025. Russia is also looking at space exploration plans till 2050 and further on.
    Mike E
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    Post  Mike E Wed Sep 24, 2014 5:56 pm

    Russia to orbit its first woman in 20 years
    Russia will launch three members of the International Space Station, ISS, crew, on Thursday. The Russian commander Aleksandr Samoukutyaev will accompanied by NASA astronaut Barry Wilmoreare and by Elena Serova, the first Russian woman launching into space in two decades. The crew is expected to work on the station for five and a half months and return to Earth in March 2015. During their mission designated 40S in the ISS schedule, the trio will represent the 41st and 42nd long-duration expeditions onboard the outpost.

    Launch and docking

    The liftoff of a Soyuz-FG rocket is scheduled for Sept. 26, 2014, at 00:25 Moscow Time (4:25 p.m. EDT on Sept. 25) from Site 1 at Baikonur Cosmodrome. The launch vehicle will be carrying the 7,220-kilogram Soyuz TMA-14M spacecraft with a three-member crew.
    Following a vertical liftoff, the Soyuz-FG rocket will head east to enter an initial orbit with an inclination 51.6 degrees toward the Equator. The four boosters of the first stage will separate slightly less than two minutes in flight, following by separation of the second stage 4.7 minutes after the liftoff. The third stage should insert Soyuz TMA-14M into a 200 by 242-kilometer parking orbit slightly less than nine minutes of powered flight.
    The Soyuz TMA-14M then scheduled to conduct four engine firings during the first and second revolution around the Earth in order to rendezvous and dock at the MIM2 module, a part of the Russian segment of the ISS at 06:16 Moscow Time on September 26, 2014 (10:16 p.m. EDT on September 25).


    Last edited by Mike E on Thu Sep 25, 2014 1:16 am; edited 1 time in total
    Mike E
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    Post  Mike E Wed Sep 24, 2014 5:58 pm

    State Commission approves crewmembers for ISS-41/42 long-term expedition to ISS

    BAIKONUR, September 24. /ITAR-TASS/. The State Commission on Wednesday approved crewmembers for the Expedition 41/42 to the International Space Station (ISS) on September 26.
    The Soyuz TMA-14M spacecraft will deliver crewmembers of the next ISS long-term expedition, including a Russian woman cosmonaut for the first time in the last 20 years, to the ISS.
    “The Souyuz TMA-14M spacecraft will carry Russian cosmonauts Alexander Samokutyayev and Yelena Serova, and NASA astronaut Barry Wilmore. The backup crew is made of Russian cosmonauts Gennady Padalka and Mikhail Korniyenko, as well as American astronaut Scott Kelly,” one of the crewmembers told Itar-Tass.
    The ISS crew will stay aboard the station for 168 days. The crewmembers are to handle three Russian resupply spacecraft Progress and a European ATV vehicle. Samokutyayev, together with the ISS crew member Maxim Surayev who is currently aboard the station, will take a spacewalk.
    Mike E
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    Post  Mike E Thu Sep 25, 2014 12:48 am

    Russian astronomers spot second planet in Alpha Centauri system

    As of now, astronomers have discovered 1,791 exoplanets in 110 planetary systems outside our Solar System

    ST. PETERSBURG, September 24. /ITAR-TASS/. St. Petersburg astronomers have spotted one more planet circling a star in the Alpha Centauri system just 4.36 light-years away from the Solar System. The discovery was announced on Wednesday at a scientific conference Journees-2014 held at the Pulkovo Observatory in St. Petersburg. The new plant cannot be seen even though a telescope - astronomers calculated its approximate location by mathematical methods. It is located outside the so-called habitable zone, or the orbital region around a star in which an Earth-like planet can possess liquid water on its surface and possibly support life. “We believe that this planet may be located at a distance of 80 astronomical units /a unit of length, roughly the distance from the Earth to the Sun, which is 150 million kilometers/ and is orbiting around the centre of the binary star system Alpha Centauri AB with an orbital period of about 100 years,” Ivan Shevchenko, the head of the laboratory of planets and small bodies dynamics at the Pulkovo Observatory, told ITAR-TASS. It is a second known planet in the Alpha Centauri system. The first one was found in 2012 near Alpha Centauri B by the Harps instrument at the European Southern Observatory's La Silla facility in Chile. As of now, astronomers have discovered 1,791 exoplanets in 110 planetary systems outside our Solar System. Most of exoplanets were detected by the so-called transit method, which is based on the observation of a star's small drop in brightness, that occurs when the orbit of one of the star's planets passes /”transits”/ in front of the star, Shevchenko said, adding that this method was suggested by Otto Struve /1897-1963/, one of the most outstanding astronomers of the 20th century. Along with the transit method, there are other techniques that are traditionally used to detect extrasolar planets, including the radial velocity method and the astrometry method. The latter was first used by famous French mathematician Urbain Le Verrier, who is known for his prediction of the existence of the then unknown planet Neptune in 1846.
    Mike E
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    Post  Mike E Thu Sep 25, 2014 12:56 am

    Can't believe I haven't posted this already... Embarassed (I'd typically would put this article in the news section, but I think this one deserves "better".)

    Russia to allocate $8.2 billion for ISS development up to 2025 — deputy PM

    Dmitry Rogozin clarified that the spacecraft to be maintained at the International Space Station was intended for experiments carried out in the conditions of deep vacuum

    STAR CITY (Moscow region), September 23. /ITAR-TASS/. Russia plans to allocate 321 billion rubles ($8.2 billion) for developing the International Space Station (ISS) up to 2025, Russian Deputy Prime Minister  Dmitry Rogozin said on Tuesday. “The 2016-2025 draft of the target federal program provides for allocating 321 billion rubles for the ISS development and operation, including the creation of new modules for unmanned spacecraft,” Rogozin said during a visit to a cosmonaut training center. “Russia channels considerable funds into development of this area of Russian space science. We are now thinking of research projects designed to explore outer space, as well as new projects in manned cosmonautics,” Rogozin said. Rogozin clarified that the spacecraft to be maintained at the International Space Station (ISS) was intended for experiments carried out in the conditions of deep vacuum. “All space experiments onboard the International Space Station are being conducted under Russia’s existing long-term program of applied scientific research,” Rogozin said. These experiments include applied scientific research; the study of physical and chemical processes; materials in space conditions; the study of Earth from outer space; man in space; space biology; biotechnologies and space exploration technologies.

     - Sooooooo.... This one comes as a shocker to myself! Shocked The planned obsolescence date of the ISS is said to be 2020, with 2028 being a "best case scenario".... With OPSEK and an ambitious space program coming up, why would they put that much money into the already "overused" ISS? That money is enough to fund the entire super-heavy program, plus a couple A5 launches! I understand that they want to do more experiments up there, but that extra money could go into speeding up the assembly of OPSEK, allowing Russia to complete the same experiments while being 100% space independent! Now that the US is officially going to use their own lifters and spacecraft, Russia's dominance over the ISS project will begin to shrink... Might as well jump ship and reassemble the (going to be used on OPSEK) Russian craft that are part of the ISS! - It would further slow down the US ISS program, is that is desirable... Anyway, if they reuse some sections of the ISS, Russia can then launch the Node Module in 2016 and start assembly! It would be in operation by the scheduled obsolescence of the ISS, wouldn't be expensive (they'd probably save money, as the ISS program isn't cheap), and as mentioned before, would be a Russia-only project. OPSEK should also be able to accommodate any Russian sections/crafts that were planned for the ISS as well.... IMHO, there is no downside to doing this, and no upsides in continuing the ISS program! - Get it together Roscosmos!
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    Post  Mike E Thu Sep 25, 2014 9:25 pm

    Soyuz spaceship with international crew on board to lift off overnight from Sept 25 to 26

    The participation of Russian woman cosmonaut Yelena Serova in the space expedition will be a notable feature of the flight

    BAIKONUR, September 25. /ITAR-TASS/. A Soyuz TMA-14M manned spaceship with an international crew of a long-duration expedition 41-42 on board is to be launched on the night from September 25 to 26 from Baikonur spaceport for a journey to the International Space Station /ISS/. A spaceport official told ITAR-TASS, "The liftoff of the carrier rocket Soyuz-FG with the spaceship Soyuz TMA-14M from Baikonur's Gagarin Site 1 is scheduled for 20:25 GMT".

    The participation of Russian woman cosmonaut Yelena Serova in the space expedition will be a notable feature of the flight. She will be the first Russian space woman to set out on a long space flight after the elapse of 20 years. Her predecessor, Yelena Kondakova, made a five-month orbital flight aboard the Mir space station in 1994.

    The spaceship will be piloted by Russian cosmonaut Aleksandr Samokutyayev. He and his crew mates Yelena Serova and American astronaut Barry Wilmore when reaching the ISS will join Maksim Surayev, Gregory Wiseman, and Alexander Gerst, who have been workign aboard the ISS since May this year. The new crew will work in orbit for 169 days.
    The spaceship TMA-14M is to dock with the ISS after a shortened, six-hour, flight at 02:25 GMT on September 26, mooring at the Russian module Poisk /quest/ /or MIM-2 of the orbital station. One of the advantages of the shortened-flight diagram is that the crew do not have to get adapted to zero gravity in the closed space of the spaceship Soyuz where, besides, it is rather cold.
    The condition of weightlessness begins to tell on the human organism in about five hours' time /of the flight/, that is, the cosmonauts will be adapting themselves to zero gravity when aboard the ISS in comfortable conditions. The first manned space flight according to the shortened diagram /the spaceship makes only four orbital revolutions/ was made by the crew of the Soyuz TMA-08M spaceship in March 2013.

    When in orbit, the new crew are to perform an extensive programme for scientific studies and applied research and experiments and receive three Russian resupply Progress spacecraft and a European ATV space vehicle. Besides, Samokutyayev together with Maksim Surayev is to take a spacewalk.

    The safety of the spaceship along the entire flight path will be ensured by military and civilian aircraft and helicopters as well as a ship of the search-and-rescue service of the Russian Navy in the event of an emergency landing of the Soyuz TMA-14M, said a Federal Space Agency official.
    Mike E
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    Post  Mike E Thu Sep 25, 2014 9:27 pm

    Russian company to produce 10 small commsats for India within five years

    NEW DELHI, September 25. /ITAR-TASS/. The Russian subdivision of the multinational space company Dauria Aerospace and India's Aniara Communications Company have agreed to advance ten small small geostationary spacecraft, developed and made in Russia, on the markets of Asia and the Middle East witnin five years. A respective agreement was signed on Thursday on the sidelines of the first Skolkovo Foundation Council session in India. Sergey Ivanov, General Director of the Dauria Aerospace, told ITAR-TASS, "The Agreement provides for Aniara's exclusive right to promote our communications satellites over a period of five years. So, this refers to the development, production and launching of ten spacecraft for Aniara". Earlier, at the Farnborough air show, Aniara announced its decision to place an order with the Dauria Aerospace for two satellites, and signed an agreement on the designing and production of spacecraft with an aggregate cost of $200 million. The Russian side expects to launch them at the end of 2017 early in 2018 by means of one carrier rocket. Ivanov specified, "A timeframe regarding the production of ten satellites are in the stage of discussion so far. We expect that it will take three years to make the first two spacecraft and two years to produce subsequent ones. The designing and development of the spacecraft is to be completed by December this year".
    The Dauria Aerospace brings into being and deploys an orbital cluster on the basis of small spacecraft. The Company designs and makes publicly-financed satellites at the Ames research center of NASA in California and the Skolkovo innovations center near Moscow. A low price /$100 million per spacecraft/ and a weight of less than one tonne are characteristic of small geostationary satellite platforms.
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    Post  Mike E Fri Sep 26, 2014 1:38 am

    Soyuz TMA-14M enters orbit, one solar panel fails to open - RSW

    Russia launched three members of the International Space Station, ISS, crew, on Thursday. The Russian commander Aleksandr Samoukutyaev was accompanied by NASA astronaut Barry Wilmore and by Elena Serova, the first Russian woman launching into space in two decades. The crew is expected to work on the station for five and a half months and return to Earth in March 2015. During their mission designated 40S in the ISS schedule, the trio will represent the 41st and 42nd long-duration expeditions onboard the outpost.

    The liftoff of a Soyuz-FG rocket took place as scheduled on Sept. 26, 2014, at 00:25 Moscow Time (4:25 p.m. EDT on Sept. 25) from Site 1 at Baikonur Cosmodrome. The launch vehicle was carrying the 7,220-kilogram Soyuz TMA-14M spacecraft with a three-member crew.
    Following a vertical liftoff, the Soyuz-FG rocket headed east to enter an initial orbit with an inclination 51.6 degrees toward the Equator. The four boosters of the first stage separated slightly less than two minutes in flight, following by the separation of the second stage 4.7 minutes after the liftoff. The third stage inserted Soyuz TMA-14M into a 200 by 242-kilometer parking orbit after slightly less than nine minutes of powered flight.
    The spacecraft successfully entered orbit, however one of its solar panels did not deploy. The Soyuz could still make it to the ISS under its scheduled four-orbit rendezvous profile relying on its onboard battery, before it needed to be recharged, sources said.
    The Soyuz TMA-14M then scheduled to conduct four engine firings during the first and second revolution around the Earth in order to rendezvous and dock at the MIM2 module, a part of the Russian segment of the ISS at 06:16 Moscow Time on September 26, 2014 (10:16 p.m. EDT on September 25).
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    Post  George1 Sat Sep 27, 2014 3:20 am

    First manned spaceship to be launched from Vostochny onboard Angara rocket — Roscosmos

    BAIKONUR, September 26. /ITAR-TASS/. The first manned spaceship will be launched from the Vostochny space facility onboard the Angara rocket, head of the Russian Federal Space Agency (Roscosmos) Oleg Ostapenko said on Friday.

    “This will be the Angara rocket. Everything has been spelled out. We’re working on that basis,” Ostapenko said.

    Ostapenko said other carrier boosters would be launched from the Vostochny space facility as well. “We don’t rule out that more powerful boosters will be launched,” he said.
    Preparation of first Angara launch goes as scheduled — deputy minister

    Media reports said earlier that the creation of a super-heavy missile system would be included in the federal space program for 2016-2025. Roscosmos asked to provide over 200 billion rubles (over $5 billion) to create such system at the Vostochny space facility.

    According to earlier reports, the first manned launch from Vostrochny Cosmodrome is scheduled for 2018.

    On September 23, Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin said the first manned spaceship would be launched from the new Vostochny space facility in the Russian Far East on time and without delay. “I would like to fix one very vital date which no one should call into question. I mean the year 2018 and the first manned launch from Vostochny (which is still under construction).”

    On September 24, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a resolution to create a commission for the construction of Vostochny Cosmodrome. Rogozin was appointed as chairman of the commission.

    Vostochny should become operational in 2015 and start sending manned missions in 2018.

    The cosmodrome is intended for launching automatic and piloted space missions under national, international and commercial programs. Its construction started in 2012 and the first launch is expected to be carried out in by 2015 on board Soyuz-2 light carrier rockets. By 2018, it will be ready to launch heavy Angara-5A rockets. The cosmodrome will also have infrastructure for future piloted missions.

    More than 400 social, engineering and transport infrastructure facilities, 115 km of roads and 125 km of railroads will be built at the cosmodrome.

    Experts say that the commissioning of the cosmodrome will allow Russia to carry out independent and more effective space activities, launch more space vehicles, reduce environmental impact, facilitate economic development of the region, create new jobs in related industries, and make the region more attractive to investors.
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    Post  Viktor Sun Sep 28, 2014 12:13 pm

    Launch was success Very Happy

    I wonder if that satellite may be one from Liana constellation

    Russian communications satellite "Ray" into its target orbit
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    Post  Mike E Wed Oct 01, 2014 7:03 am

    New Russian spotting system to detect rocket fragments in real-time mode

    MOSCOW, October 1. /TASS/. Russia's Ministry of Defence will start operating the newest spotting system this year to detect falling rocket fragments. The system was developed at the Khrunichev research and production center to spot impact areas of parts of the carrier rocket Angara, the newspaper Izvestia writes.
    According to the newspaper's source at the headquarters of the Air and Space Defence Forces, the possibility is considered to use the new spotting system at the Kamchatka rocket test site Kura during tests and training launchings of ballistic missiles.
    The spotting station was devised in order to detect rocket fragments in a real-time mode. Territories allotted for rocket fragments impact areas in the Komi Republic and in Tomsk Region comprise mainly forests. In Komi, an impact area delves 40 km inthe the " Yugyt va" national park .
    The falling parts of rockets fly to the ground at a supersonic speed, developing a sonic wave which spreads over to a considerable distance. The station will be able to detect those waves and determine rocket fragments impact areas within difference in time during which a sonic wave is recorded by modules.
    Operating autonomously, the modules of one station contact one another via a radio channel, determine the fragment's flight path and an impact area, after which a module of the station transmits data to an Orlan pilotless craft.
    In order to determine with the highest accuracy the coordinates of rocket fragments impact areas, it is planned to deploy three to five stations, with a distance between them being 80-100 km.
    "Such a system makes it possible simultaneously to track up to 100 fragments, although, usually, it is needed to spot four to five ones," a developmen engineer said.
    According to the newspaper's source in the management of the Khrunichev Center, the falling stages of Angara will not be collected immediately after launch, since impact areas are in a difficult-of-access terrain: the fragments will be collected in winter time.
    A pilotless craft will be launched and maintained by specially developed autonomous field support stations: these are mobile bases for monitoring impact areas. They are mounted on a Kamaz truck with a high cross-country capacity.
    "Impact areas are vast. They cannon be encompassed. Therefore, prior to the launch, people will be searched for by a heat-seeking pilotless craft: people usually enkindle a fire or their diesel generator is operating," the station development engineer explains.
    The engineer said that an algorithm for the operation of the impact area coverage systems and their interaction with response services will be described in an agreement which the Defence Ministry is planning to conclude with the administrations of the Komi Republic and Tomsk Region in the coming weeks.
    The first launch of a heavy-class carrier rocket Angara is scheduled for December this year. A light-class Angara was successfully tested on July 9, , 2014. According to information from the source in the management of the Khrunichev Center, the cost of the development of the development of the entire station to monitor Angara parts impact areas was not more than 160 million roubles.
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    Post  Mike E Wed Oct 01, 2014 7:26 am

    Well, what do you know!!!

    Space Station Partners in No Rush To Decide on Extension

    TORONTO — The heads of three space agencies said Sept. 29 that their governments may not make decisions until 2016 on whether to continue to participate in the international space station beyond 2020.
    In a “Heads of Agencies” panel session that kicked off the 65th International Astronautical Congress here, and a press conference that followed, the leaders of the Canadian Space Agency, European Space Agency, and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency said they had near-term priorities to address first, including maximizing the current use of the ISS, before considering the extension proposed by the United States earlier this year.
    “In Japan, the government hasn’t decided to join in this program after 2020,” said Naoki Okumura, president of JAXA, when asked about the government’s support for an extension during the panel session. He said discussion would continue within the government until a 2016 meeting of the ISS partners in Japan.
    One factor in that decision, he suggested, was finding ways to reduce costs of running the station’s Kibo laboratory module. “We have to tackle that,” he said.
    At a press conference after the panel, Okamura’s Canadian and European counterparts also said they were not planning an immediate decision on an extension to at least 2024. ESA director general Jean-Jacques Dordain said his “number one” priority regarding ISS at the agency’s ministerial meeting in December is funding Europe's contribution to the ISS to 2020.
    “We are preparing some principal decisions for what’s next after 2020, but there will not be any funding commitment,” he added. “The member states will be invited to give their views on what’s after 2020.”
    “Our focus is to maximize the use of the international space Station,” said Walter Natynczyk, president of the Canadian Space Agency. “And then, we will have a look at the entire value proposition when we put a case [for an extension] before the government of Canada.”
    In January, the White House and NASA announced that the United States would seek an extension of ISS operations from 2020 to at least 2024. Agency officials have indicated that, from a technical standpoint, the ISS could continue operating to 2028.
    NASA Administrator Charles Bolden, who was also present at the panel session and press conference, did not comment on the statements by his counterparts. In a speech at a Federal Aviation Administration commercial space transportation conference in February, William Gerstenmaier, NASA associate administrator for human exploration and operations, said he expected the international partners would take “several years” to decide on the proposed extension, but would eventually approve it.
    Geopolitical tensions this year involving Russia, while not affecting near-term ISS operations, have cast a shadow on the station’s long-term future. Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin said earlier this year that Russia would end its participation in the ISS in 2020, although since then Roscosmos has indicated they are considering plans for an extension beyond 2020.
    Denis Lyskov, deputy head of Roscosmos, was scheduled to appear on the panel at the conference. However, he was one of a number of Russian and Chinese delegates who were unable to attend because of visa problems.
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    Post  Viktor Wed Oct 01, 2014 9:13 pm

    Nice thumbsup

    RF beginning to replace foreign satellite components long before sanctions
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    Post  Mike E Thu Oct 02, 2014 6:21 am

    Satellite manufacturing in Russia to demand more time amid US sanctions — expert

    Russia has to replace the components from the US electronic base with their analogues

    DOROKHOVO, October 1. /TASS/. The US restrictions on supplies to Russia of electronic base of components for satellites have led to an increase in the terms for creating spacecraft by 8 or 10 months, the deputy chief designer of the Information Satellite Systems said on Wednesday.
    “Due to the introduced sanctions, we have been forced to modify a range of devices and equipment. This increases the production time for the spacecraft by 8-10 months from the schedule,” Yury Vygonsky said at the Satcomrus-2014 conference.
    Russia has to replace the components from the US electronic base with their analogues, Vygonsky said, adding, “There are the Russian and European (components), everything depends on the quality.”
    By mid-2015, the Russian satellite manufacturing company plans to return to “standard terms of manufacturing satellites by an absolutely compatible price,” the expert said.
    Amid the Ukrainian crisis, the United States has tightened its export controls in a move that has seriously hurt important Russian space projects. Washington is apparently denying export licenses that allow European and other foreign communications satellites containing US components to be launched into space by Russian rockets, analysts say.
    The 19th annual Satcomrus-2014 conference is taking place on October 1-2 outside Moscow. The event has been organized by the Russian Satellite Communications Company (RSCC).
    The conference is attended by senior officials from Russia’s Ministry of Communications and Media and the Russian Federal Communications Agency, telecommunication equipment manufacturers, financial institutions, as well as industry analysts, experts and journalists.
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    Post  Mike E Thu Oct 02, 2014 9:36 pm

    Russian scientists develop system for monitoring space junk

    Space litter poses a threat to the population of the Earth, manned orbital stations, spaceships and orbital satellites

    ST.PETERSBURG, October 2. /TASS/. Scientists from St. Petersburg Polytechnic University have developed a monitor system to follow space junk.
    The system is a set of monitoring meters intended for a spaceship to ensure its safety if established on board, Rector of the St. Petersburg university Andrei Rudskoi told TASS on Thursday.
    The space litter monitoring project aroused interest at the Russian Space Agency (Roscosmos). Chief of the Roscosmos agency Oleg Ostapenko has promised support to St. Petersburg Polytechnic University to enable it to test the litter monitoring meters on the orbit.
    Space litter poses a threat to the population of the Earth, manned orbital stations, spaceships and orbital satellites. Meters on board the spaceship might warn a space crew about space litter on the spaceship's trajectory, and a space crew might either change route or destroy the space litter before encounter.
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    Post  Mike E Thu Oct 02, 2014 9:51 pm

    New robot control system brings Russia closer to building Moon base — expert

    The project named Kontur-2 is part of a larger program of preparations for building a lunar base for geological research and construction of a station on the Moon

    ST. PETERSBURG, October 2. /TASS/. Russian scientists are creating a new robot control system that will eventually allow the country to build a lunar base, Federal Space Agency (Roscosmos) Head Oleg Ostepaneko said on Thursday.
    He said Roscosmos and St. Petersburg State Polytechnic University would carry out a joint experiment in outer space in January 2015 using a special joystick aboard the International Space Station (ISS) to control ground-based robots.
    There will be three robots on arth: two in Russia and one outside Munich in Germany as this is a joint project with the German Aerospace Center. The robot in Germany will go along a preset line without touching the edges of the metal plate it will move around.
    “This will be a motor coordination exercise for cosmonauts,” Vladimir Zaborovsky, chair of the university’s department of telematics, told TASS.
    The Russian robots will act as a single system - a hyper manipulator (a robot resembling a large snake or worm that can get through an aperture) fixed on a movable platform.
    “It will be up to the cosmonaut to decide how this system will move,” Zaborovsky said.
    He said the project named Kontur-2 is part of a larger program of preparations for building a lunar base for geological research and construction of a station on the Moon where most of the work is to be done by robots.
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    Post  Mike E Sat Oct 04, 2014 3:19 am

    Russia postpones automatic lunar exploration program until 2018

    Russian scientists will focus on Moon and Mars exploration and repeat the Phobos-Grunt mission in the next decade

    MOSCOW, October 3. /TASS/. Russia has postponed the start of its automatic lunar exploration program from 2016 until 2018, Space Research Institute Director Lev Zelyony said on Friday.

    “They [the timelines] have been changed from 2016 to 2018. These are Luna Globe and orbiting Luna [program],” he said, adding that there should be no further delays.
    “We want to implement three lunar projects this decade: Luna-25, Luna-26 and Luna-27,” he said.
    Zelyony said these timelines have been set in the Federal Space Program proposed by the Federal Space Agency (Roscosmos).
    Russian scientists will focus on Moon and Mars exploration and repeat the Phobos-Grunt mission in the next decade, Zelyony said earlier.
    “The Moon and Mars are our priority for 2016-2025,” he said.

    The Federal Space Agency (Roscosmos) in partnership with the European Space Agency will be carrying out two stages of the ExoMars mission in 2016 and 2018.

    In 2016, Roscosmos is planning to join Europe and Japan in the BepiColombo project.
    In 2017, it will orbit the Spektr-RG telescope and send a Russian rover, Luna-Globe, to the Moon in 2019, for the first time in years.
    A UV observatory is to be launched in 2020; an orbiting module and a dropship are scheduled to be sent to the Moon in 2012 and 2023, respectively.
    After thoroughly testing lunar and Martian technologies, approximately in 2024, Russia, may repeat its Phobos-Grunt mission to Mars’ satellite Phobos to collect its soil and bring it back to Earth.
     
    - In all honesty, this is probably a good thing... It gives em' more time to perfect their technology, and reduces the stress load... 

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