Monday, March 25, 1996

Express

 1995-U01


The Experiment Reentry Space System (EXPRESS) was a joint German-Japanese project to develop a recoverable microgravity system. If it had been successful, EXPRESS would have made Germany and Japan jointly the fourth nations to recover a spacecraft from orbit, after the US, the USSR, and China. The spacecraft was built by a collaboration of Deutsche Aerospace and the Krunichev factory; the reentry vehicle was based on a KB Salyut reentry vehicle. The 765 kg satellite ( 360 kg SM, 405 kg RV) was due to make a five day flight in a 210 x 398 km x 33 deg orbit. and deorbit at perigee and reenter to land in the Australian desert Woomera range. Program management was led by the DLR, with ISAS providing the launch vehicle, the final Mu-3S-2 with a modified KM-M kick stage. Control by GSOC.

RV was 1.31m long 1.0 dia. SM was 0.9m long 1.0 dia. The KM had a mass of 610 kg full 105 empty. The M-3S third stage was 4980 kg full 1700 kg empty with upper composite, 3605 kg f 325 kg em on its own.

The payload included an experiment to process oil refining catalyst, as well as three reentry materials tests. The vehicle was SM No. 19507 with a 92E No. 19590 reentry vehicle.

EXPRESS was launched at 1345 on 1995 Jan 15, but at T+103 seconds the thrust vector control on the second stage malfunctioned, throwing the vehicle off course. The rocket did reach orbit, but only just: the orbital parameters were 110-114 km x 230-239 km x 31.1 deg, according to a later study. The reentry capsule and the service module, still attached to each other, was thought to have reentered over the Pacific between 1600 and 1630, on its second orbit of the Earth. However, in Dec 1995 it was finally reported in Western aerospace circles, thanks to the work of the Kettering Group, that a newspaper in Ghana had recorded the reentry and landing of an object near Kotorigu, Ghana which may have been the Express reentry module. This was later confirmed and the vehicle returned to Germany, with some experimental results. Reentry was probably at about 1750 on Jan 15; the deorbit system probably did not operate, but SM separation may have operated automatically.


EXPRESS 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1995 Jan 15  1345  Launch by Mu-3S-II  Kagoshima  
  T+1:23? B1 sep 
  B2 ignition 
 1346  Stage 2 TVC malfunction 
 1350? Stage 3 burn 
 1351? KM-M burn? 
 1351? Orbit insertion  110 x 250 x 31 
 1355? KM-M sep 
 1430? Perigee at 105 km near Santiago 
 1520? Apogee at 210 km?  103? x 210 x 31 
 1605? Perigee at 103 km? 
 1650? Apogee at 155 km?  90? x 155 
 1755? Reentry 
 1800? Landed in Ghana 

Kosmos 525

 1972-083A


Kosmos-525 was a Zenit-2M/Gektor flight launched in Oct 1972 from Plesetsk to a 65.4 deg orbit. The mission lasted 11 days and a 16KS Nauka capsule was carried and later jettisoned.


Kosmos-525 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1972 Oct 18  1159:59  Launch by 11A57  PL  
 1204  Blok-I burn  
 1208  Blok-I sep  
1972 Oct 19  0000   89.25 207 x 269 x 65.39 (RAE) 
1972 Oct 19  0109   89.25 208 x 265 x 65.4 
1972 Oct 26  0534   89.11 198 x 262 x 65.4 
1972 Oct 26  1019? 16KS Capsule sep (83C) 
1972 Oct 27  0648  16KS orbit  89.01 191 x 258 x 65.4 
1972 Oct 28  0634   89.08 198 x 259 x 65.4 
1972 Oct 29  0445?  Retrofire 
 0455? PO sep 
 0501? Entry 
 0517?  Landed 

Aviation Week: March 11,1996

 https://welib.org/md5/d637a160cf3d0f3ac0accd8487f5ec10

May 13,2026

  https://planet4589.org/space/jsr/back/news.855.txt