Wednesday, January 31, 1996

Zond 2

  1964-078C


The next 3MV launch was a new Mars flyby variant, 3MV-4 No. 2 (or 3MV-4A No. 2?), the first 3MV aimed towards Mars. It was named Zond-2 once on an interplanetary trajectory. Zond-2 suffered a partial power failure after orbit insertion (a solar panel failed to deploy). It transmitted until May 1965. The probe flew 1500 km from Mars in Aug 1965. 


Zond-2 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1964 Nov 30  1325  Launch by 8K78  KB 
 1330?  Blok-A sep 
 1330?  Blok-I burn 
 1334?  Blok-I sep 
 1425?  BOZ burn 
 1426?  Blok-L burn 
 1430?  Blok-L sep 
1965 May 5   End of transmissions 
1965 Aug 6   Mars encounter, 1500 km 

Tuesday, January 30, 1996

STS-40 (Columbia)

 1991-040A


The next mission for Columbia was the first Spacelab Life Sciences mission. STS-40 took off on 1991 Jun 5. Launch was successful, but after payload bay door opening video of loose thermal blankets and minor damage to the payload bay door seal at the rear of the Orbiter caused some concern. Eventually analysts concluded that the loose material wasn't a problem.

A 1 hour 25 min launch delay curtailed the first day's experiments on cardiovascular and metabolic measurements. Human vestibular experiments began on Jun 7, and continued on Jun 8 with use of the rotating chair and on Jun 11 with the rotating dome apparatus. Jun 12 saw some Earth observations.

Columbia returned to Earth on Jun 14. Because of a concern about the payload bay door seal, the port door was closed first, at 1125, and the seal was observed from the Spacelab module. The starboard door was closed 25 minutes later. 


STS-40 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1991 Feb 9   Processing  OPF/1 
1991 Apr 26   Rollover  VAB/3 
1991 Apr 26   ET mate  VAB/3 
1991 May 2   Rollout  LC39B 
1991 Jun 5  1324:51  Launch  LC39B 
 1326:55  SRB sep 
 1333:21  MECO  88.22? 76 x 287 x 39.0 
 1333:40  ET Sep 
 1407:09  OMS 2 2:04 60m/s 90.30 279 x 298 x 39.0 
 1409:13  OMS 2 CO 
 1500  PLBD open 
1991 Jun 7    90.27 278 x 296 x 39.0  
1991 Jun 11    90.22 278 x 292 x 39.0  
1991 Jun 12  0300   90.18 277 x 289 x 39.0 
1991 Jun 14  1125  PLBD port door close  90.16 276 x 288 x 39.0  
 1149PLBD stbd door close 
 1437:36  OMS DO (2:50) 87m/s   
 1440:26  OMS DO CO  87.21 -15 x 287 x 39.0 
 1507:49  Entry 
 1521  66 km alt 
 1539:11  Landing  RW22 EAFB  
 1539:26  NGTD 
 1540:02  Wheels stop 
1991 Jun 19  1430SCA takeoff  EAFB 
 1725SCA landing  Biggs AAF TX 
1991 Jun 20  1200 SCA takeoff  Biggs AAF TX 
 1250SCA landing  Kelly AFB TX 
 1355SCA takeoff  Kelly AFB TX 
 1640SCA landing  Columbus AFB MS 
1991 Jun 21  1125SCA takeoff  Columbus AFB MS 
 1450SCA landing  KSC SLF 
  Major Mod  OPF/2 
1991 Aug 7   Major Mod  OPF/3 
1991 Aug 9  1700SCA takeoff  KSC 
 2045SCA landing  MacDill AFB 
1991 Aug 12  1430SCA takeoff  MacDill AFB 
 1615SCA landing  Kelly AFB TX 
1991 Aug 13  1020SCA takeoff  Kelly AFB TX 
 1525SCA landing  Palmdale, CA 
1991 Aug 14   Major Mod at Rockwell  Palmdale 
1992 Feb 5   Complete Mod  Palmdale 
1992 Feb 9  1245SCA takeoff  Palmdale 
 1710 SCA landing  Ellington Field, TX 
 2105SCA takeoff  Ellington Fld, TX 
 2330SCA landing  KSC  
1992 Feb 100600Processing for STS-50  OPF 

Sunday, January 28, 1996

STS-51-L (Challenger)

 1986-F01


Challenger's last mission began at 1638:00 on 1986 Jan 28. A rubber O-ring seal failed in the aft field joint of the right hand solid rocket booster. The seal failure developed into a hole in the SRB casing, with a tongue of flame playing on the External Tank. The rear attach point joining the SRB to the tank failed 12 seconds after the burnthrough, and the SRB pivoted outward, its nose coming inward and colliding with the nose of the ET. Telemetry from the Shuttle ceased with the words "Uh-oh" from the crew. Disintegration of the External Tank and ignition of its hydrogen fuel created a pressure wave which blew the Orbiter apart. Three minutes after the failure, the crew cabin hit the Atlantic at 3200 km/h. Much of the debris was recovered from the ocean floor and stored at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. The SRBs, flying free and relatively intact, were destroyed in flight by the Range Safety Officer. It would be two and a half years before the next Shuttle flight.

The 51-L flight would have entered an initial 100 x 352 km orbit following the OMS-1 burn. ET impact would have been in the Indian Ocean at 80E 28S.


51-L 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1985 Dec 16    VAB/3 
1985 Dec 22   Rollout  LC39B 
1986 Jan 28  1638:00  Launch  LC39A 
 1639:00  RH SRB burnthrough 
 1639:12  Rear attach point failure 
 1639:13  RH SRB impacts nose of ET 
 1639  ET LH2 tank deflagration 
 1639  Orbiter disintegration 
 1639  STS stack breakup, 15.5 km alt. 
 1640:26  Debris apogee, 37 km? 
 1642:46  Crew cabin and debris impact Atlantic 

Saturday, January 27, 1996

Tiros 8

  1963-054A


The fourth enlarged hatbox Tiros, Tiros VIII (A-53, Tiros H) was launched at 0930 on 1963 Dec 21 and inserted into orbit at 0941. It operated until 1967 Jun 30. In addition to the usual 2 TV cameras, it carried an APT (Automatic Picture Transmission) experiment. Its Dec 1993 orbit was 667 x 706 km x 58.5 deg.


Tiros 8 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1963 Dec 21  0930:00  Launch by Delta B CK LC17 
 0932:25 T+2:25 MECO  
 0932 T+2:45 Thor sep 
 0932:45 M+0:20 Delta 20007 SES 2:44? 
  Left yaw manuever 
 0935:00  M+2:35 Delta SECO  -4010 x 713 x 58.5 
 0940:26 M+8:01 Altair 20008 burn 
 0941:18  T+8:53 Altair cutoff 
 0951:26 Altair sep 
 0951:28 Despin weights release 
1963 Dec 22    99.36 692 x 763 x 58.49 
1967 Jun 30   End of tx  99.34 706 x 747 x 58.50 
1993 Dec    667 x 706 x 58.5 

Aviation Week: October 16,1995

 https://welib.org/md5/f3ca3074e49a3c130f10fb98e16a3834

Thursday, January 25, 1996

Ranger 3

  1962-001A


The 336 kg Ranger III (P-34) was launched at 2030:11 by Atlas Agena B from Cape Canaveral. The Atlas failed to respond to ground commands and flew on autopilot, hotter than planned. The first Agena burn was successful, but the vehicle entered a higher than planned 200 x 507 km x 29.4 deg parking orbit. The Agena B reignited and inserted the Ranger into translunar coast at 2050:09. The trajectory would miss the Moon by 32000 km. A course correction at 1000 on Jan 27 was made in the wrong direction; at 1729 on Jan 28 the probe made its terminal orientation maneuver. The probe made its closest approach to the Moon, 37000 km, at 2348 on Jan 28, and went out into solar orbit. The last transmissions from Ranger III were returned on Feb 2.

Ranger 3 had 6 kg of prop for the midcourse engine. Retro was 97 kg and capsule was 45 kg.


Ranger 3 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1962 Jan 26  2030:11  Launch by Atlas Agena 
  BECO 
 2032  T+2:10? Booster sep 
 2032:31  57 km, 2.94 km/s 
 2034  T+4:40? Fairing 
 2034  T+4:43? Atlas sep 
 2034  T+4:56? Agena B MES-1 
 2037?  T+7:23? Agena B MECO-1 200 x 507 x 29.4 
 2049?  MES-2 
 2050:09  MECO-2  275 x -1006572 x 29.54  
 2052?  Agena sep 
 2100?  Agena solid retro 
1962 Jan 27  1000  TCM  -5984 x -1337582 x 31.50  
1962 Jan 28  1729  Terminal mvr 
1962 Jan 28  2324:53  Flyby Moon 35134 km over 227.8, -45.2  35132 x -41633 x 133.75 
1962 Feb 2   End of transmissions  0.98 x 1.16 AU x 0.40  

Payload:

  • TV camera

  • Gamma Ray Spectrometer

  • Radar Altimeter

Town and Country: August 1995

 https://welib.org/md5/d936e4ee1ed4ec9568020c10bb03544c

Wednesday, January 24, 1996

Zond 9B

  1972-F07


The final N-1 test flight was 7L, launched from Baikonur on 1972 Nov 23. It carried an L-3S LOK orbital craft, together with a mockup of the LK lander. After an almost-complete first stage burn, the oxygen pump on engine no. 4 exploded; fire spread through all engines and the vehicle exploded. The LOK was pulled free by the SAS. Stage 2 was meant to separate and ignite at 1:53.


L-3S 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1972 Nov 23  0611:55  Launch by N-1 (7L)  KB 
 0613:30  T+1:35 Central six engines shut down per plan 
 0619:41? Engine 4 explosion 
 0613:42  T+1:47 Destroyed alt. 40 km T+107s 
 0616:37T+4:42 End of tx from Blok B 
 0619?Debris impact 180 km downrange 

Sunday, January 21, 1996

Kosmos 2287

 1994-050A


Uragan No. 767 (Kosmos-2287) was launched in Aug 1994.


Kosmos-2287 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1994 Aug 11  1527:46  Launch by Proton-K/DM-2  KB LC81 
  T+2:07 St 1 sep 
  T+3:20 GO sep 
  T+5:38 St 2 sep 
 1537  T+9:40 St 3 MECO? 
 1537  T+9:52 St 3 sep 
 1537  T+10? Perekhodnik sep from DM2 
 1629  T+1:01:58 DM burn 1 
 1635 T+1:07:50 DM MECO1 
 1922  T+3:54:48 DM burn 2 
 1925 T+3:57:14 DM MECO2 
 1925  T+3:57s KA-1 sep 

"V" Is for Victory

 https://welib.org/md5/c9e6a1f9bb5ffbcace9b4369e1607cdb

Saturday, January 20, 1996

Raduga 17

 1985-107A


Raduga/Gran' No. 28 was launched in Nov 1985 to become the Statsionar 3 satellite at 35E, replacing Raduga No. 21. Raduga 28 was stationed at 35E until 1988, when it moved to the 69E Indian Ocean position for two years. In 1990 it was moved to 85E, and in Sep 1991 it was stored at 49E until retirement in Dec 1992.


Raduga No. 28(F18) 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1985 Nov 15  1429:00 Launch by Proton-K  KB 
 1438  Stage 3 sep 
 1545? DM burn 1 
 2103? DM burn 2 
 2107? DM sep 
1985 Nov 15    1480.38 36547 x 36750 x 1.4 GEO 94.4E+10.8W 
1985 Nov 18    1480.72 36568 x 36742 x 1.3 GEO 69.9E+10.9W 
1985 Nov 23    1436.52 35791 x 35798 x 1.3 GEO 35.8E+0.1W 
1986 Jan 7    1436.09 35776 x 35795 x 1.2 GEO 34.3E 
1987 Apr 12    1436.35 35787 x 35796 x 0.1 GEO 35.6E 
1988 Jan 21    1436.40 35791 x 35793 x 0.7 GEO 35.5E 
1988 Nov 15    1435.94 35774 x 35792 x 1.5 GEO 34.8E 
1988 Nov 16   mv out  
1988 Dec 9   mv in  1436.18 35769 x 35806 x 1.6 GEO 69.7E 
1989 Mar 1    1436.08 35766 x 35805 x 1.8 GEO 69.2E 
1990 Jan 16    1436.17 35767 x 35808 x 2.6 GEO 69.1E 
1990 Apr 19    1435.97 35773 x 35794 x 2.8 GEO 70.2E 
1990 Apr 20   mv out 
1990 Apr 30   mv in  1436.07 35774 x 35797 x 2.8 GEO 85.1E 
1990 Aug 28    1435.95 35780 x 35787 x 3.1 GEO 85.2E 
1991 Jul 4    1436.19 35785 x 35791 x 3.9 GEO 85.6E 
1991 Aug 15    1436.32 35784 x 35797 x 4.0 GEO 83.8E 
1991 Aug 20   mv out  1441.24 35801 x 35972 x 4.0 
1991 Sep 23   mv in  1436.29 35769 x 35810 x 4.1 GEO 49.5E 
1992 Jan 11    1435.96 35758 x 35809 x 4.4 GEO 48.7E 
1992 Dec 8   1435.94 35756 x 35811 x 5.1 GEO 50.1E 

Partners in Love

https://welib.org/md5/f713ac0e424dadbc754c53c4d6e546a3

Friday, January 19, 1996

Okean 2

 1990-018A


The second named Okean was Okean-O1 No. 5 (NKhM No. 7).


Okean-O1 No. 5 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1990 Feb 28  0055:00  Launch by Tsiklon-3  PL 32/2 
  T+2:00 St 1 sep 
  T+3:33 GO sep 
  T+4:38 St 2 sep 
  T+5:20 S5M burn 1 
 0101  T+6:48 S5M MECO1 
  T+39:20 BOZ burn 
 0135 T+40:58 S5M burn 2  
 0136 T+41:08 S5M MECO2 
  T+41:38 S5M sep 
1990 Feb 28    97.78 639 x 665 x 82.5 
1994 Jul 12 end of ops 

Thursday, January 18, 1996

Kosmos 1847

 1987-046A



Kosmos-1847 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1987 May 26  1339:59 Launch by Soyuz  PL 
 1348  Blok-I sep 
1987 May 26    89.65 168 x 345 x 67.1 
1987 Jun 1    89.19 159 x 308 x 67.1 
1987 Jun 3   
89.72 173 x 348 x 67.1 
1987 Jun 15   SpK-1 fiducial 
 0445?  Deorbit 
 0455?  Entry 
 0507?  Landed
1987 Jun 15    89.58 181 x 325 x 67.1 
1987 Jun 15  

89.17 168 x 298 x 67.1 
1987 Jun 20    88.81 163 x 268 x 67.1 
1987 Jun 21   
89.56 181 x 324 x 67.1 
1987 Jun 21   
89.29 181 x 297 x 67.1 
1987 Jun 28    88.96 176 x 269 x 67.1 
1987 Jun 28   
89.53 177 x 324 x 67.1 
1987 Jul 3    89.32 176 x 304 x 67.1 
1987 Jul 4   
89.71 179 x 340 x 67.1 
1987 Jul 5   SpK-2 fiducial 
 0706?  Deorbit 
 0716? Entry 
 0728?  Landed
1987 Jul 21  1842   88.86 172 x 263 x 67.1 
1987 Jul 22   
 1824? Deorbit 
 1839? Entry 
 1851?  Landed

Saturn SA-10

  1965-060A


Saturn SA-10 was launched at 1300:01 on 1965 Jul 30 and reached orbit at 1310:34. The orbital parameters were 95.52 min, 535 x 667 km x 28.8 deg. The Apollo BP-9A CSM separated from the Saturn S-4-10 stage and the cylindrical SMA (Service Module Adapter), allowing the Pegasus III MMC (micrometeoroid mounting capsule) payload to deploy. Pegasus III remained attached to the Saturn. It reentered on 1969 Aug 4. The mission was known as Apollo-Saturn 104 (AS-104).


SA-10 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1965 Jul 30  1300:01 Launch by Saturn I  KSC 
 1302:23  T+2:22 IECO 
 1302:29 T+2:28 OECO 
 1302:30  T+2:29 S-I sep  -6070 x 262  
 1302:31 S-IV burn 
 1302:42 Ullage motors sep 
 1302:42 LES sep 
 1305:54  S-I apogee 262 km 
 1310:30 S-IV-10 ECO 
 1310:41  Orbit insertion 
 1312:05 S-I impact 
 1313:32  LH2 NPV venting complete 
 1313:33  Pegasus C forward restraint sep 
 1313:33  Apollo BP-9A sep 
 1314:33  Pegasus C wing deploy 
 1315:12  Pegasus C wing complete

Wednesday, January 17, 1996

DFH-37

 1993-063A


The FSW-1 No. 5 flight was announced as Jian Bing 93 (Progress or Pathfinder). Mass was 2100 kg.


FSW 1 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1993 Oct 8  0800  Launch by CZ-2C  JQ 
 0802  T+2:10 MECO 
 0802  Stage 2 burn 
 0804?  T+4:02? Stage 2 MECO 
 0807?  Stage 2 VECO 
 0808?  Stage 2 sep 
1993 Oct 10    89.54 207 x 295 x 56.9 
1993 Oct 16  0520  Equipment module sep 
1993 Oct 16   Capsule sep 
1993 Oct 20  1900   88.96 195 x 250 x 56.9 
1993 Oct 28   Reentered over Pacific 

Cold War chronology : Soviet-American relations, 1945-1991

 https://welib.org/md5/a9d042cbddf742a2e4643533964da52e

Tuesday, January 16, 1996

Resurs 1992

 1992-056A


14F43 No. 54, a Resurs F-1 spacecraft, was launched on 1992 Aug 19 and announced with the name Resurs F. It carried a US Defense Department secondary payload provided by the Naval Research Lab, an experiment to study atmospheric circulation using Beryllium-7 as a tracer. The Resurs F-1 also carried two Pion-Germes subsatellites.


Resurs F-1 14F43 No. 54 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1992 Aug 19  1010  Launch by Soyuz-U  PL LC16 
 1018  Blok I sep 
1992 Aug 20  0230   89.10 221 x 238 x 82.56 
1992 Aug 25  1200   89.09 223 x 235 x 82.57 
1992 Sep 1   Pion sep 
1992 Sep 2   Pion sep 
1992 Sep 30230   89.04 221 x 232 x 82.56 
1992 Sep 4    
 0614?  Deorbit 
 0624? PO sep 
 0631? Entry 
 0646? Landed 

Hesiod, The Homeric Hymns, and Homerica

 https://www.gutenberg.org/files/348/348.txt

Friday, January 12, 1996

STS-61-C (Columbia)

 1986-003A


61-C was originally scheduled to fly Satcom K-1, Leasat 5 and MSL-2. Leasat 5 was not ready and was replaced by HHG-1 and GBA-1.

On 1985 Dec 19, the count got to within 14 s of launch before the computer called an RSLS hold because of a hydraulic power unit failure. The launch attempt of Jan 12 was successful, and that evening Columbia deployed the Satcom K2 satellite into orbit. An IR camera took pictures of the deployment.


STS 61-C 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1985 Jul 11   Road transfer from Palmdale  Edwards 
1985 Jul 14   SCA  Offutt AFB, NE 
1985 Jul 14   SCA  KSC 
1985 Jul 16   Storage  VAB 
1985 Jul 18   Processing  OPF/2 
1985 Sep 8   Storage  VAB 
1985 Sep 26   Processing  OPF/2 
1985 Nov 22   Rollover  VAB 
1985 Dec 1   Rollout  LC39A 
1985 Dec 19   RSLS hold T-14s  
1986 Jan 6   Scrub T-31s, ET LOX procedure error 
1986 Jan 7   WX scrub T-9m 
1986 Jan 9   Broken sensor part in SSME-2, scrub T-20m 
1986 Jan 10   WX scrub T-14m
1986 Jan 12  1155:00  Launch  LC39A 
 1157:07  SRB sep, 46.5 km   
 1203:21  MECO, 110.0 km  
 1203:40  ET sep, 111.6 km 7.824km/s 86.03 2? x 151? x 28.5 
 1205:22  OMS 1 (2:44) 81 m/s  88.74 100 x 324 x 28.5  
 1208:06  OMS 1 CO 
 1241:06  OMS 2 (2:16) 66m/s   
 1243:21  OMS-2 CO 
 1325  PLBD open  91.07 322 x 331 x 28.47 
 2126:29  Satcom K2 deploy  
1986 Jan 12  2141:28  OMS 3 (LH, 16s) 4m/s  91.23 323 x 346 x 28.5 
 2141:44  OMS 3 CO 
1986 Jan 14    91.24 323 x 347 x 28.5 
1986 Jan 16   DO scrub (WX)
1986 Jan 17   DO scrub (WX)
1986 Jan 18  0843:20  PLBD close 
 1144   91.21 321 x 346 x 28.5 
 1254:30  OMS DO (232 s) 127m/s  
 1258:22  OMS DO CO  39 x 326 x 28.5 (PK) 
 1328:03  Entry   
 1358:51  Landing  RW22 EAFB 
 1359:07  NGTD 
 1359:50  Wheels stop 
1986 Jan 22  1505  SCA  Davis-Monthan AFB AZ 
1986 Jan 22  2000SCA  Kelly AFB TX 
1986 Jan 23  1625SCA  Eglin AFB FL 
1986 Jan 23  1920  SCA KSC  

Thursday, January 11, 1996

Aviation Week: June 12,1995

 https://welib.org/md5/dac6da7be76410291a4a22b1c5911c84

Magellan

 1989-033B


The Venus Radar Mapper, Magellan, was deployed from orbiter Atlantis at 0102 on 1989 May 5 (?) into a 90.5 min, 295 x 303 km x 28.9 deg orbit. The SRM-1 stage of IUS-18 was fired at 0201:33 to place the stack in a 271 x 25790 km x 28.0 deg transfer orbit; at 0206:28 the SRM-2 ignited, cutting off at 0208:13 and separating at 0227:22 to placed Magellan in solar orbit. IUS delta-V was 4.8 km/s.

Three course corrections were made on the way to Venus: TCM-1 at 0200 on 1989 May 22, TCM-2 on 1990 Mar 13, and TCM-3 on 1990 Jul 25. Magellan's perihelion was on 1989 Oct 7.

At 1900 on 1990 Aug 9, Magellan was 387000 km from Venus; by 1600 on Aug 10, the range had dropped to 20000 km. The probe's Star 48B solid motor ignited for an 83s burn at 1632 on Aug 10, and at 1634 Magellan was inserted into a 294 x 8472 km x 85.5 deg orbit around Venus, reaching periapsis at 1637. The Star 48 separated at about 0130 on 1990 Aug 11. Mapping of Venus would take several months.

The nominal mission was complete by 1991 Apr 28, with the spacecraft in a 290 x 8460 km x 85 deg orbit. At 1833 on 1991 May 17, a 33 min orbit trim changed the ascending node, and Cycle 2 radar mapping began. From Jun 27 to Jul 10 the probe filled in gaps in the Cycle 1 survey. Cycle 3 began in 1992 Jan, and was interrupted from 1992 Apr 22 to May 11 for X-band doppler data used for gravity field mapping. Radar operations were also suspended in June and abandoned on 1992 Sep 13.

On 1992 Sep 14, a 54 min OTM (Orbit Trim Maneuver) lowered the orbit from 258 x 8450 km to 182.5 x 8450 km for Cycle 4's gravity mapping program. At 1731 on 1993 May 25 a 10 min OTM lowered the orbit from 170 x 8450 km to 147 x 8450 km beginning the Transition Experiment (TEX). This would be the first use of aerobraking by an American spacecraft. At 1900 Magellan entered the Venusian atmosphere for 36 minutes; a second pass was made at 2214. Precise control of the orbit was now necessary to ensure that Magellan's orbit was changed in the desired manner without burning the spacecraft up. The first Corridor Orbit Trim Maneuver (COTM) at 1246 on 1993 May 26 lowered periapsis to 146.2km, a double burn at 2107 on May 27 put it at 143 km. COTM 3 at 1757 on May 29 left the orbit at 141.1 x 8200 km. By Jun 2 it was 140.6 x 7900 and the apogee was dropping 100 km a day. The solar panel temperatures increased by 40 degrees during atmospheric passes, to 337K. COTM 4 at 1724 on 1993 Jun 4 raised the perigee slightly, to 141.1 x 7700 km. By Jun 14 the apogee was down to 6600 km. Upward perigee maneuvers COTM 5,6, and 7 were due on Jun 16, 20 and 24. On Jun 25 the orbit was 139 x 5300 km. COTM 8 was due in late June, COTM 9 was at 0007 on Jul 1. The process continued through July; by Jul 23 apogee was only 1800 km. A new series of 5 EOTMs (Exit OTMs) began at 1140 on Aug 3 when perigee was raised by 14 km, and at Aug 5 the TEX was complete with Magellan in a 197 x 540 km orbit. A new phase of gravity mapping, Cycle 5, now began.

The end of Cycle 5 was marked by 2 OTMs on 1994 Mar 10 which lowered the periapsis by 24 km. On Apr 4-5 and Apr 11-12 a further series of burns lowered the orbit from 184 x 530 km to 212 x 384 km. Cycle 6 began on Apr 15.

The final phase of Magellan's mission began on 1994 Aug 25 with 2 OTMs to lower the orbit to 172 x 390 km. From 1994 Sep 6 to Sep 9 controllers carried out the Windmill Experiment, in which Magellan's solar panels were turned into the wind and the torque on them was measured. Another OTM on around Sep 28 lowered the orbit again; on Oct 11 the orbit was lowered into the atmosphere. Two-way communications with Magellan were lost at 1002 on Oct 12, but intermittent signals were detected from the spacecraft until around 1800 on Oct 12.


Magellan 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1989 May 4  1847:00  Launch from LC39B 
1989 May 5  0101:32  Magellan deploy  294 x 303 x 28.9 
 0110  Solar array deploy  
 0201:33 IUS SRM-1 burn 149s 
 0203:42? IUS SRM-1 burnout  292 x 25796 x 28.0  
 0203:42? IUS SRM-1 sep 
 0206:28 IUS SRM-2 burn 105s 
 0208:13? IUS SRM-2 burnout 
 0227:22 IUS SRM-2 sep 
 0756?  Pass EL1:4 
1989 May 7 2010? Solar orbit insertion 
1989 May 17   3.12 Mkm from Earth, 2.67 km/s rel 
1989 May 18   3.35 Mkm from Earth, 2.65 km/s rel 
1989 May 22  0200  TCM-1 3.0m/s 
1989 Aug 7   26.0 Mkm from Earth 
1989 Oct 7   Perihelion 
1989 Oct 17   109 Mkm from Earth 
1990 Mar 13   TCM-2 
1990 Jul 25   TCM-3 
1990 Aug 6   4347000 km to Venus  
1990 Aug 8  0720? Enter Venus sphere 
1990 Aug 9  1900  Range 387000 km  
1990 Aug 10  1600  Range 20000 km  
 1632  Vrel = 10.818 km/s 
1990 Aug 10  1632:09  Star 48 VOI burn 2.7 km/s Vrel=8.2 km/s  
 1633:32  VOI  294 x 8472 x 85.5  
1990 Aug 11  0130  Star 48 sep 
1991 Apr 28   Nominal mission complete  290 x 8460 x 85  
1991 May 17  1833  OTM 33 min, Cycle 2 
1992 Jan   Cycle 3 mapping  
1992 Apr 22   Begin X-band doppler 
1992 May 11   End X-band dopller  
1992 Jun   Radar ops suspended 
1992 Sep 13   End of radar ops 
1992 Sep 14   Cycle 4 gravity mapping  258 x 8450  
  OTM 54m  182 x 8450  
1993 May 25   Begin Transition Experiment (TEX) 170 x 8450  
  OTM 10m  147 x 8450  
 1900  First aero pass, 36 min  
 2214  Second aero pass 
1993 May 26  1246  COTM 1 lower peri  146 x 8450  
1993 May 27  2107  COTM 2  143 x 8400?  
1993 May 29  1757  COTM 3  141 x 8200  
1993 Jun 2    141 x 7900 
1993 Jun 3    141 x 7800 
1993 Jun 4  1724  COTM 4  141 x 7700  
1993 Jun 14    141 x 6600  
1993 Jun 16  
COTM 5, raise peri 
1993 Jun 20  
COTM 6 raise peri 
1993 Jun 24  
COTM 7 raise peri 
1993 Jun 25    139 x 5300  
1993 Jun  
COTM 8  
1993 Jul 1  
COTM 9  
1993 Jul 23    140? x 1800  
1993 Aug 3  1140 Exit OTM, EOTM 1 raise peri 14 km 
1993 Aug 3   EOTM 2 
1993 Aug 4?   EOTM 3 
1993 Aug 4?   EOTM 4 
1993 Aug 5   EOTM 5, TEX complete 
1993 Aug 5   OTM  197 x 540  
  Begin Cycle 5 gravity mapping 
1994 Mar 10   OTM Lower peri 24 km 
  OTM  184 x 530  
1994 Apr 4   OTM  
1994 Apr 5   OTM 
1994 Apr 11   OTM 
1994 Apr 12   OTM  212 x 384  
1994 Apr 15   Cycle 6 
1994 Aug 25   OTM  
  OTM  172 x 390 
1994 Sep 6   Begin Windmill expt 
1994 Sep 28   OTM lower 
1994 Oct 11   OTM lower
1994 Oct 12  1002 Comm lock lost 
1994 Oct 12  1800 Venus entry 

Payload:

  • S-band SAR Radar mapping antenna, 2.385 GHz

Wednesday, January 10, 1996

Seventeen: August 1995

 https://welib.org/md5/13cb5c70af40f7c30923db36ee38e9c6

Sunset Sensation

https://welib.org/md5/6068d9ff251924d0ff22170674d0301b


Aviation Week: March 20,1995

 https://welib.org/md5/58d8a31040168d65893479d0e14dd0b0

Vortex 12

 1988-077A


In contrast to VORTEX 11, it appears that VORTEX 12 (USA 31) failed to reach its final orbit, and six years later a number of debris objects in transfer orbit were cataloged as coming from the 1988-77 launch. The Transtage was damaged during ascent, and the fuel tank leaked in parking orbit. The He tank leaked during the first burn. At the second burn, the He had been depleted and the restart failed.

The UN registered orbit was an unphysical 99.8, 151 x 14103 km x 29.3 deg; probably the apogee was missing a decimal point. Later debris objects were registered in a 465 x 39449 km x 26.7 deg orbit.


VORTEX 12 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1988 Sep 2  1205:02  Launch by Titan 3D/Transtage (34D-3) CC 
  T+1:50 Stage 1 ignition 
  T+2:02 SRM sep 
  T+4:35 St 1 sep 
 1209 T+4:45 Fairing sep 
 1209:51  T+4:49 Transtage damaged, leak 
 1213?  Stage 2 MECO  99.8 151 x 1410.3? x 29.3 
 1213 T+8:05 Stage 2 sep 
 1229?  Transtage burn 1 (310s)  161 x 35888 x 26.7? 
   708.9 465 x 39449 x 26.7 (D) 
  Coast (5h15m) 
 1800? Transtage failed to restart 
 1815?  Transtage sep 

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