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Электронная библиотека астронома-любителя. Книги по астрономии, телескопостроению, оптике.
Дата: 03 марта 1999 (1999-03-03)
От: Alexander Bondugin
Тема: Если деньги на станцию "Мир" будут найдены, то следующими на
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Если деньги на станцию "Мир" будут найдены, то следующими на
нее полетят Сергей Залетин и Александр Калери
По сообщению РИА "Hовости", определены составы основного и дублирующего
экипажей 28-й экспедиции на станцию "Мир". Командиром основного экипажа
назначен Сергей Залетин, бортинженером - Александр Калери.
По постановлению правительства, полет станции со второй половины 1999
года должен осуществляться за счет привлекаемых внебюджетных средств. Поиск
инвесторов будет вестись до апреля, и если деньги не будут найдены, то в
августе станция "Мир" будет затоплена в Тихом океане. Программа полета
экипажа, находящегося сейчас на "Мире, предусматривает оба варианта развития
событий. Если поиск денег будет успешным, то на станцию должен быть готов
лететь новый экипаж, который сменит работающих сейчас Виктора Афанасьева,
Сергея Авдеева и французского космонавта Жан-Пьера Эньере. Завершение их
миссии запланировано на 23 августа.
Александр Калери уже совершил два космических полета, Залетин был
дублером вернувшегося накануне на Землю командира экипажа 26-й экспедиции
Геннадия Падалки. Дублирующий экипаж - Салижан Шарипов и Павел Виноградов.
Шарипов в январе прошлого года совершил полет в составе экипажа шаттла
Endeavor, который состыковался с "Миром". Виноградов в 1997 г. входил в
состав 24-й экспедиции на станцию "Мир".
По словам только что вернувшегося со станции бортинженера Сергея Авдеева,
состояние орбитального комплекса сейчас "очень хорошее". По мнению
специалистов, станцию, находящуюся в полете 14-й год, можно эксплуатировать
еще как минимум три года. Ежегодно на ее обслуживание требуется около 250 млн
дол.
Источник: InfoArt News Agency
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=SANA=
Дата: 03 марта 1999 (1999-03-03)
От: Alexander Bondugin
Тема: Экипаж станции "Мир" выращивает пшеницу
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Экипаж станции "Мир" выращивает пшеницу
В обширной научной программе нынешнего экипажа станции "Мир" есть и
сельскохозяйственные эксперименты. Сейчас экипаж собирается выращивать второе
поколение "космической" пшеницы из семян, полученных в выросших ранее на
станции колосьях. Космонавты Геннадий Падалка и Сергей Авдеев впервые в мире
получили семена пшеницы, выросшей на орбите. Сбор урожая состоялся 26
февраля. Часть семян 28 февраля доставили на Землю Геннадий Падалка и
словацкий космонавт-исследователь Иван Белла. Теперь их будут изучать в
Институте медико-биологических проблем.
Еще 10 "космических" семян оставшиеся на станции Виктор Афанасьев, Сергей
Авдеев и француз Жан-Пьер Эньере посадят снова. Если они вырастут, то это
будет второе поколение семян "космической" пшеницы. Раньше на "Мире" пытались
выращивать разные растения, но семена получать не удавалось. Семена были
получены только у пшеницы сорта "Апогей", который специально был создан для
будущих систем жизнеобеспечения.
Источник: InfoArt News Agency
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=SANA=
Дата: 03 марта 1999 (1999-03-03)
От: Alexander Bondugin
Тема: Запущен российский спутник связи "Радуга-1"
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Запущен российский спутник связи "Радуга-1"
28 февраля в 7 ч 00 мин по московскому времени с космодрома Байконур
стартовала ракета-носитель "Протон-К", которая вывела на геосинхронную орбиту
спутник "Радуга-1". Спутник будет обеспечивать службы правительственной и
военной связи. Hа орбите уже находятся несколько спутников такого класса.
Это был второй запуск ракеты "Протон" в этом году. Две недели назад
ракета "Протон" вывела на орбиту американский коммуникационный спутник
Telstar-6. Следующий старт "Протона" будет коммерческим - на март намечен
запуск спутника связи AsiaSat 3S.
Источник: InfoArt News Agency
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=SANA=
Дата: 03 марта 1999 (1999-03-03)
От: Alexander Bondugin
Тема: SpaceViews - 1 March 1999 [1/6]
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S P A C E V I E W S
Issue 1999.03.01
1999 March 1
http://www.spaceviews.com/1999/03/
*** News ***
NASA Considers Early Hubble Repairs at Budget Briefing
NASA Continues to Wait on Service Module
Russia Seeks More Money for ISS Work
Soyuz Returns Two Cosmonauts to Earth
Rotary Announces Roton Rollout
Mars Global Surveyor Ready for Mapping Mission
Delta, Ariane Launches Successful
Canada, France Get Stable Space Budgets
SpaceViews Event Horizon
Other News
*** Articles ***
Spy in the Sky
*** News ***
NASA Considers Early Hubble Repairs at Budget Briefing
NASA is considering plans to move up a shuttle mission to the
Hubble Space Telescope to keep the telescope operational, the space
agency head told Congress Wednesday, February 24.
During testimony before the space subcommittee of the House
Science Committee, NASA administrator Dan Goldin said that problems
with Hubble's gyros, used to maintain the telescope's orientation, may
force NASA to move up a Hubble servicing mission planned for mid-2000
to as early as this October.
A decision to move up the repair mission is under study and
could be announced within the next few days, Goldin said when asked by
Rep. George Brown (D-CA), ranking minority member of the subcommittee.
Speaking on CNN early Thursday, Goldin said a decision on
moving up the mid-2000 mission, or adding a separate mission devoted
to just to replacing the faulty gyros, would be made on Friday,
February 26. No decision was announced, but a decision is expected
this week.
Hubble has six gyros, although only three are needed for
normal telescope operations. Two of the gyros failed in the last two
years, and a third is experiencing problems.
Should two more gyros fail, Hubble would be put into a safe
mode that would preserve the spacecraft until repairs could be made,
but would prevent normal use of the telescope. "What we're concerned
about is losing the scientific data stream for a year or so," Goldin
said.
Rumors of an early repair mission have been spread for weeks,
although as recently as early February Goldin himself downplayed any
chance for such a mission.
The shuttle mission scheduled for June 2000 to Hubble is
designed to not only replace the gyros but to replace older
instruments on Hubble with new versions, including an advanced camera
for deep-space surveys. The camera would not be ready for an October
1999 repair mission, but would have to wait for another repair mission
in mid- to late-2000.
Goldin was on Capitol Hill to discuss the planned fiscal year
(FY) 2000 budget with members of the House. Despite an $87 million
cut in funding for NASA in 2000 compared to FY1999, Goldin was
optimistic about NASA's budget and its outlook.
"[The FY2000 budget] is the first budget in five years which
reflects an increase in the outyears," Goldin said, referring to
projections for small increases in NASA funding after 2000.
Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA), chair of the subcommittee, was
less enthused about the budget, but focused his ire on the Clinton
Administration, not NASA. "At a time when NASA has made real
progress, this Administration's FY2000 budget seems ungrateful at
best," he said.
"I am concerned about the Administration's continuing approach
to funding NASA relative to other agencies," Rohrabacher said, noting
that overall civilian research and development funding is up 3 percent
in the FY2000 budget. "Everyone but NASA seems to be reaping the
rewards of a balanced budget."
NASA Continues to Wait on Service Module
NASA will continue to wait on the oft-delayed Service Module,
a major stumbling block for space station assembly, rather than use a
backup module system under development, space agency officials said
Thursday, February 25.
In testimony at a hearing of the space subcommittee of the
House Science Committee, NASA associate administrator Joseph
Rothenberg said he was "confident" that the Service Module had
overcome funding problems and would launch by the end of the year.
NASA has worked with the Naval Research Labs to develop the
Interim Control Module (ICM), a module that could be used to provide
propulsion to the station should the Service Module continue to be
delayed. However, Rothenberg said the ICM will be held back for
possible future uses.
Saying it was more cost effective not to use the ICM now,
Rothenberg explained that if the ICM were attached to the current
International Space Station assembly, the station's propulsion needs
would be met, but no life support or other features needed for the
station to be habitable would be available.
Those features are provided by the Service Module, which would
not be able to dock to the station with the ICM also attached without
a special shuttle flight to "reconfigure the stack" by removing the
ICM.
NASA prefers to hold the ICM in reserve until later in the ISS
project, as a contingency option should Russia be unable to provide
the Progress spacecraft that would help reboost the station in
addition to ferrying supplies.
When asked by subcommittee chairman Rep. Dana Rohrabacher
(R-CA) if this was a change in policy from a year ago, Rothenberg
agreed.
Rothenberg said the Service Module is undergoing testing and
will be shipped to the Baikonur launch site as early as mid-April,
pending a general design review in early April. Delays in the testing
phase of development, which Rothenberg said he was confident were just
"typical integration and test problems", could delay the launch to as
late as November or December of this year.
With the first elements of the station in orbit, there seems
little appetite in Congress to revamp or cut the station program.
However, Rohrabacher, a long-time critic of putting Russia in the
"critical path" of space station development, said that it was
"prudent for us to take steps now so if the Russians go under we will
not be dependent on them."
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Дата: 03 марта 1999 (1999-03-03)
От: Alexander Bondugin
Тема: SpaceViews - 1 March 1999 [2/6]
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Russia Seeks More Money for ISS Work
The Russian Space Agency wants to sell the United States more
equipment to help provide more money for its International Space
Station commitments, officials said this week.
NASA administrator Dan Goldin expressed an interest during
Congressional testimony this week in purchasing equipment like extra
Soyuz spacecraft, but has no money in the proposed fiscal year 2000
budget for those items.
"We received indications that it is a possible area of
interaction when we can provide some potential services for our
partners," Alexei Krasnov, deputy head of the Russian Space Agency's
international cooperation department, told Reuters after meeting with
NASA officials.
Those services, Krasnov said, "can help us out with the
addition of off-budgetary, above-budget resources that can be used for
the [ISS] program."
Last fall, NASA agreed to purchase Russia's share of research
time on the station during the assembly phase for $60 million. The
deal came after plans to purchase one or more Soyuz spacecraft, which
can be used as crew return vehicles, fell through.
However, NASA officials told Reuters that the Soyuz spacecraft
may be on the table again, as well as the backup to the Zarya control
module, which could be adapted for use as a cargo module for ISS.
"We're trying to get a proposal, I guess you would call it,
from them on what their plan is for the Mir and how they plan to
support that, how it affects ISS resources," Mike Baker of NASA's
Moscow office told Reuters. "And then if we can, armed with that
information, we can purchase some crew return vehicles or something
like that."
In a prepared opening statement before the space subcommittee
of the House Science Committee Wednesday, February 24, administrator
Goldin said NASA was open to purchasing more equipment from Russia.
While the current budget includes $100 million for Russian purchases,
"this [2000] budget includes no provision for purchases from Russia in
FY 2000 and beyond."
However, in later questioning, Goldin said NASA's other
international partners need to step up and support Russia financially
as well. "Our partners need to reach out and help the Russians," he
said, pointing to one small agreement between ESA and Russia as an
example.
Soyuz Returns Two Cosmonauts to Earth
A Russian Soyuz capsule safely returned to Earth late
Saturday, February 27, carrying two cosmonauts from the Mir space
station.
The Soyuz TM-28 capsule touched down on the snow-covered
steppes of Kazakhstan at 9:14 pm EST February 27 (0214 UT Feb. 28), a
little more than three hours after the capsule undocked from Mir.
The two cosmonauts on the capsule, Russian Gennady Padalka and
Slovak Ivan Bella, were reported in good condition after the landing.
Padalka had spent six months on Mir as station commander, while Bella
had only been on Mir since Monday, February 22 as a guest cosmonaut.
Bella performed a number of experiments as part of the
Stefanik scientific program, named after a Slovak scientist and
politician of the early 20th century. Those experiments included
studying quail eggs that hatched on the station and other biological
experiments.
Remaining on Mir are new commander Viktor Afanasyev and French
guest cosmonaut Jean-Pierre Haignere, who arrived at Mir Monday with
Bella in Soyuz TM-29, and flight engineer Sergei Avdeyev, who was been
on Mir since last August.
This three-man crew is likely the last to remain on the
station. Russian officials have indicated that they would like to
extend the life of the station, but cannot afford to do so without
private investors.
Energia, the company that operates Mir for the Russian Space
Agency, claimed in December to have found a foreign investor, but that
investor has since apparently backed out. The identity of the
investor was never revealed.
The current crew will remain on Mir until August. If no
additional support is found for Mir the station will be deorbited
shortly thereafter.
Rotary Announces Roton Rollout
Rotary Rocket will roll out the first test version of its
Roton reusable launch vehicle on Monday, March 1, the company
announced this week.
Rotary will roll out the Roton Atmospheric Test Vehicle (ATV)
at a ceremony at Rotary's facility at the Mojave, California, airport.
It will be the first public display of the 19-meter (63-foot) tall
vehicle.
The ATV will be used to test the flight characteristics of the
Roton in the atmosphere, using its unique -- for a spacecraft --
rotors, powered by small rocket engines near the tips of the blades.
Piloted flight tests are slated to begin in a few weeks.
The ATV lacks the rocket engines that will be used to boost
the spacecraft into orbit. Rotary is planning another test vehicle,
the PTV, that will test the spacecraft's rockets. Assembly of the PTV
is scheduled to begin this summer, with test flights early next year.
The operational version of the Roton, known as the Roton C-9,
will be able to place 3,200 kg (7,000 lbs.) into low Earth orbit at a
cost of $2,200 per kg ($1,000 per lb.), significantly less than
current expendable launch vehicles. The Roton C-9 is scheduled to
enter commercial service in 2000.
"The rollout of the Roton represents the beginning of a new
era in access to space," said Rick Tumlinson, president of the Space
Frontier Foundation, one of the cosponsors of the rollout ceremony.
"If this project is successful it will open the high frontier not just
to astronauts, but for ticket purchasing passengers -- and within a
couple of years -- not decades."
The rollout ceremony will feature speeches by government and
industry officials, including Patti Smith, FAA associate administrator
for commercial space transportation; Lori Garver, NASA associate
administrator for policy and plans; and author Tom Clancy, a leading
investor in Rotary Rocket.
The rollout will be broadcast on the Web from 2-4 pm EST
(1900-2100 UT) at the site http://rollout.org.
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Дата: 03 марта 1999 (1999-03-03)
От: Alexander Bondugin
Тема: SpaceViews - 1 March 1999 [3/6]
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Mars Global Surveyor Ready for Mapping Mission
The Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) successfully entered its final
mapping orbit February 19, and will soon begin to return detailed
images and other data of the Martian surface and atmosphere.
Mission controllers at JPL, though, are taking precautions to
return some data before undertaking the somewhat risky maneuver to
deploy the spacecraft's high-gain antenna.
A thruster burn at 5:20 pm EST (2220 UT) February 19 lowered
the spacecraft into its final orbit 367 kilometers (229 miles) above
the surface. The spacecraft had been in a slightly higher orbit, 405
km (253 mi.), since the end of aerobraking earlier in the month.
The Sun-synchronous mapping orbit means that the spacecraft
will pass over the equator of the planet, traveling south to north, at
2 p.m. local time. This orbit will permit accurate comparisons of
different regions of the planet, since they will all be viewed at the
same local time and Sun angle.
After fine-tuning the orbit and calibrating the spacecraft's
instruments, MGS will begin returning science data on March 8. For
the first three weeks MGS will keep its high-gain antenna in its
stowed position, requiring the spacecraft to stop collecting data so
that the spacecraft and antenna can turn to face the Earth and
transmit data.
Controllers are hesitant to immediately deploy the antenna,
which would then be able to transmit data to Earth without turning the
rest of the spacecraft, because of possible problems with the
antenna's deployment system.
A large spring on MGS is designed to push the antenna out,
with dampers in place to limit the speed of deployment. Engineers,
though, have noticed problems with similar damper structures used to
deploy solar panels on other spacecraft. Should the dampers fail, the
antenna or spacecraft could be damaged, endangering the spacecraft's
capability to return data.
Antenna deployment is scheduled for March 29, pending a
mid-March decision on the deployment from NASA headquarters. When the
problem was first noticed last year, project officials considered
delaying the deployment by up to nine months, so the MGS would be able
to serve as a radio relay for the two Deep Space Two microprobes, as
planned.
Regardless of the antenna concerns, those involved with the
project are very happy to be in the final mapping orbit, one year
later than planned after problems with a loose solar panel delayed the
aerobraking phase of the mission.
"Reaching our mapping orbit has been a long time coming for
all involved," said MGS project scientist Arden Albee. "We are
delighted to finally be able to do this mission as it was designed."
Delta, Ariane Launches Successful
The eleventh time was the charm for a Delta 2 rocket that
finally launched a payload of three satellites early Tuesday, February
23, while an Ariane booster lifted off several days later.
The Delta 2 lifted off at 5:30 am EST (1030 UT) from
Vandenberg Air Force Base, California. The launch was delayed briefly
by a problem with the launch range, but no problems were reported with
the launch, and all three satellites s were successfully deployed in
orbit.
This was the eleventh launch attempt for the Delta 2 since
January 15. Most of the launch attempts were scrubbed by poor
weather. A launch attempt January 28 was aborted less than two
seconds before launch when a valve failed to open in one of the
steering engines on the booster.
The last launch attempt, February 13, was called off when a
momentary spike was observed in one of the power systems for the
rocket's electronics.
The primary payload of the Delta 2 is the Air Force's Advanced
Research and Global Observation Satellite (ARGOS) Its nine payloads
will perform upper atmospheric observations and technology
demonstrations. Experiments will range from tests of sensors planned
for use on the International Space Station to studies of orbital
debris.
Two smaller satellites were also launched on the Delta. The
Oersted satellite, from Denmark, will study the Earth's magnetic
fields and electrical properties. Sunsat, a microsatellite built by
the University of Stellenbosch in South Africa, will perform remote
sensing and amateur radio experiments.
An Ariane 44L lifted off on schedule at 5:44 pm EST (2244 UT)
Friday, February 26, from Kourou, French Guiana. No problems were
reported with the launch or the deployment of the Arabsat 3A and
Skynet 4E satellites.
Arabsat 3A will provide direct TV broadcasts, phone, and data
services in an area that includes the countries of the Arab League as
well as southern Europe. Skynet 4E will be used to provide strategic
and tactical communications for Great Britain's armed forces.
The next Ariane launch is scheduled for April 2, when an
Ariane 42P will launch the Insat 2E communications and weather
satellite for the Indian Space Research Organization.
Canada, France Get Stable Space Budgets
Both Canada and France, two key partners in the International
Space Station and other international projects, will get relatively
stable space budgets in 1999, with Canada in particular avoiding
devastating cuts, according to budget figures released earlier in the
month.
The Canadian Space Agency (CSA), which will mark its tenth
anniversary March 1, will get C$350 million (US$233 million) in the
1999 budget, a small increase from the C$346 million (US$231 million)
the CSA got in 1998.
More importantly, however, are revised projections for future
CSA budgets. A 1997 plan called for drastic cuts in the CSA's budget,
reducing the agency to a mere C$50 million (US$33 million) by 2002.
Those budgets, if enacted, would have threatened Canada's role in the
International Space Station and other projects.
However, as part of an initiative to build a strong economy
through "knowledge and innovation", the Canadian government has
increased the CSA's budget by a total of C$430 million (US$287
million) over the next three years. Those increases, and planned
increased in future years, will allow CSA's budget to level out at
around C$300 million (US$200 million).
Hugues Gilbert, director of strategic development for CSA,
told Space News that without the new money it would have been "almost
impossible" to continue to be a part of ISS. He said there are no
definite plans for spending the additional funding the agency will get
in future budgets.
Meanwhile, the budget for Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales
(CNES), the French space agency, will get 1.39 billion euros (US$1.53
billion), an increase of 0.8% over 1998's budget, according to CNES
documents released in February.
The bulk of CNES's budget is focused on two projects. Earth
observation studies, in particular the Spot-5 satellite under
development, will get 437.1 million euros ($480 million), while
planned upgrades for the Ariane 5 will cost 425.6 million euros ($468
million). Smaller amounts are devoted to scientific research,
telecommunications systems, and operations.
CNES officials told Space News that the agency is working to
transform itself from a government-like bureaucracy to something akin
to an innovative high-tech company, by partnering with French
companies on satellite projects such as Alcatel's SkyBridge
communications satellite project.
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Дата: 03 марта 1999 (1999-03-03)
От: Alexander Bondugin
Тема: SpaceViews - 1 March 1999 [4/6]
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SpaceViews Event Horizon
March 1 Pegasus XL launch of the WIRE science satellite at
9:51 pm EST (0251 UT March 2) from off the coast of
Vandenberg AFB, California
March 1 Rollout of the Roton ATV, Moj