Saturday, May 17, 2003

Soyuz 38

 1980-075A


7K-T spacecraft 11F615A8 No. 54 was launched on 1980 Sep 18 carrying Yuriy Romanenko and the first Cuban astronaut Arnaldo Tamayo Mendez. The launch was announced as Soyuz-38; Soyuz-38 docked with Salyut-6 (DOS 5) on Sep 19. It returned to Earth on Sep 26 carrying the same crew.


Soyuz-38 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1980 Sep 18  1911  Launch by Soyuz-U  KB  
 1913 Blok BVGD sep 
 1915  Blok A sep 
 1919  Blok I MECO 
 1919:50  Blok-I sep  89.0 195 x 257 x 51.6 
   205 x 292 x 51.6 
1980 Sep 19    262 x 213 x 51.6 
 2049  Docked with Salyut-6 +X port 
 2352  Hatch open 
1980 Sep 26  1015Hatch closed 
 1234  Undocked Salyut-6 +X 
 1505  Retrofire 
 1509  DO CO 
 1526  Modules sep 
 1531  Reentry 
 1554:27  Landed 175 km SE of Dzezkazgan

Wednesday, May 14, 2003

Deep Space 1

 1998-061A


NASA carried out its first launch in the New Millenium Program (NMP) on 1998 Oct 24. Deep Space 1 was placed in solar orbit by a Boeing Delta 7326 rocket.

Delta 7326 is a new variant of Delta II which uses three solid Alliant GEM-40 strapons, the standard Delta II first and second stages, and a Thiokol Star 37FM solid motor as the third stage. This third stage is smaller than the usual Delta II Star 48 third stage, but much more powerful than the earlier Star 37E model used as Delta's third stage in the 1970s and 1980s.

Delta entered a 185 km parking orbit, then fired again to enter a 174 x 2744 km x 28.5 deg orbit. The third stage separated and accelerated to solar orbit with DS1, while the second stage burned again to a planned 556 x 1042 km x 31.5 deg orbit with SEDSAT.

The 475 kg Deep Space 1 probe's structure was built by Spectrum Astro/Gilbert for JPL using the SA-200HP bus. JPL and SA collaborated on building the spacecraft systems. Its mission is to test new technology for future probes, and the main experiment is a xenon ion propulsion drive. DS1 was the first space probe to use solar electric propulsion as its primary engine. The original plan was to fly past Mars, asteroid McAuliffe and a comet West-Kohoutek-Ikemura and measure their composition with an imaging spectrometer.Delay of the launch meant a new trajectory had to be chosen. DS1 flew past minor planet (9969) Braille, formerly 1992 KD. An additional 2001 flyby of Comet Borelly was added later.

DS1 found that Braille had a rotation period of 9.4 days and a size of 2.1 x 1 x 1 km - the elongated shape raising the possibility of a contact binary.

Mass is 373.7 kg dry; it carried 81.5 kg Xe and 31.1 kg of hydrazine at launch. Propulsion is one 90mN ion thruster and 8 1-N hydrazine thrusters. The bus is an SA-200HP. Electronics and thermal control are build into the multifunctional structure of the spacecraft. A beacon monitor experiment will send back a simple 'green, yellow, red' health state signal to tracking stations. DS1 used some backup hardware from Mars Pathfinder, including the high gain antenna, and used the same design for some electronics and the on board computer.

Launch vehicle is the Delta 7326-9.5.


DS 1 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1998 Oct 24  1208:00  Launch 
  T+1:03 SRM cutoff 
  T+1:06 SRM 1-3 sep, 16 km 
  T+4:24 MECO 
  T+4:37 Stage 1 sep 
  T+4:37 Delta burn 1 
  T+4:58 Fairing sep, 125 km 
 1218  T+10:29 Delta SECO-1  88.20 185 x 185 x 28.5  
 1254  T+46:11 Delta burn 2  88.21 173 x 198 x 28.5  
 1255  T+47:05 Delta SECO-2  115.10 174 x 2744 x 28.5  
 1255  T+47:58 Delta sep 
 1256:35 T+48:35 Star 37FM burn  115.10 174 x 2744 x 28.5  
 1257:40 T+49:40 Star 37FM TECO 
 1301  T+53:37 Yo-yo weights sep 
 1301:43 T+53:43 Star 37FM sep 550 km Solar orbit C3=3.13 185 x -267640 x 28.5 
 1310 T+1:02:54 Delta burn 3  115.13 180 x 2742 x 28.5 
 1311 T+1:03:25 Delta SECO 3  100.86 556 x 1042 x 31.5 
 1336  T+1:28:20 SEDSAT sep from Delta 
1998 Oct 25  0015  Pass EL1:4 
1998 Nov 1  1504  Depart Earth sphere (1.5Mkm) 
1998 Nov 9    446.6d 0.990 x 1.287 AU x 0.37 
1998 Nov 10  1930  NSTAR burn 4.5min, shutdown 
1998 Nov 11  2005  Safemode after star tracker fail 
1998 Nov 17   Safemode, star tracker 
1998 Nov 24  2253  NSTAR burn begins 
1998 Dec 8   NSTAR burn off  450.1d 0.991 x 1.298 AU x 0.37 
1998 Dec 11   NSTAR on, burn few hr 
1998 Dec 14   NSTAR on 
1998 Dec 18  s  NSTAR off 
1999 Jan 5   NSTAR off 
1999 Jan 22   NSTAR 45min burn  459.5d 0.990 x 1.331 AU x 0.38  
1999 Mar 15   NSTAR on  459.6d 0.991 x 1.331 AU x 0.38 
1999 Apr 27   NSTAR off  470.4d 1.022 x 1.336 AU x 0.26 
1999 Jun 10   RCS test burn 0.5m/s 2min 
1999 Jun 14   AutoNav TCM part 1 NSTAR 4 hrs  
1999 Jun 14   AutoNav TCM part 2 NSTAR 4 hrs  
1999 Jun 18   AutoNav RCS burn 1m/s 
1999 Jul 23   NSTAR TCM Autonav 1m/s, 6 hr 
1999 Jul 28   Safemode  470.5d 1.022 x 1.336 AU x 0.26 
1999 Jul 28  2245? TCM 1m/s 
1999 Jul 29  0446  Flyby (9969) 1992 KD Braille at 26 km from center at 15.5km/s 
  Horizons orbit (2017 data)  103 x -105 x 92.5 
  Hill sphere of 9969 is 217 km at this point 
  In Hill sphere for about 30 sec 
1999 Jul 30  1600  NSTAR on (for 3 months?)  
1999 Sep 18   End of primary mission?  
1999 Oct 20  1100  NSTAR off  490.8d 1.083 x 1.342 x 0.19  
1999 Oct 27    492.56d 1.090 x 1.342 AU x 0.19 
1999   Orbit 1.0 x 1.3 AU x 0.4  
1999 Nov 11   Safemode, star tracker problem 
2000 Jun 8   Upload new software 
2000 Jun 21   MICAS attitude control enabled 
2000 Jun 28   NSTAR on  492.8d 1.091 x 1.342 x 0.19 
2000 Jul 5   NSTAR off; at 2.1AU from Earth OWLT=17 
2000 Jul   NSTAR on 
2000 Oct 18   NSTAR throttle for attitude control only 
2001 Jan 2   NSTAR full thrust 
2001   Orbit 1.12 x 1.42 AU x 0 
2001 Jun 30    1.293 x 1.478 AU  
2001 Sep 22  2230:37Borrelly nucleus flyby 2171 km 

2001 Dec 18  

2000end of ops
  1.225 x 1.462 x 0.1 

Payload:

  • Launch adapter propulsion module

  • NSTAR Solar electric Ion drive Xe thruster

  • Hydrazine thrusters

  • SDST Small Deep Space Transponder, Miniaturized deep space antenna

  • Ka-band solid state power amplifier

  • Low power electronics

  • Lithium ion batteries

  • AutoNav Autonomous navigation system

  • RA Remote Agent software test

  • BMOE Beacon monitor Operations Experiment, JPL

  • MICAS Miniature Integrated Camera/Imaging spectrometer, 12 kg UV, IR, visible channels.

Aviation Week: March 10,2003

 https://welib.org/md5/42b19ad034e43f1aa7b48551859b6e23

People: November 11,2002

 https://welib.org/md5/200a1814ebe6cc29bbe45adbb8a99e8e

Monday, May 12, 2003

Weekend utopia : modern living in the Hamptons

 https://welib.org/md5/aa9ef78eece3f54e05dfbeb2f8f43feb

Kosmos 910

 1977-037A


Kosmos-910 was launched into a low 149 x 507 km orbit; the rocket and one debris piece decayed from this orbit. The payload maneuvered to a high apogee path in an attempt to intercept Kosmos-909 in its 993 x 2104 km x 65.9 deg orbit. Johnson (Sov Mil Strat, p 140?) reported that an attempted first-rev intercept at 1710 km failed when the vehicle reached the target point at the wrong time.

The target satellite was at that altitude at 1312 UTC, 1402 UTC and 1509 UTC.

It we model an IS burn at 1252 UTC (first apogee and southbound equator crossing) to 465 x 1774 km, we get a reasonable match with a 230 km miss distance at 1402 UTC as the ground track heads northwards towards Baikonur again; this is a plausible model.

The satellite was deorbited soon afterwards; It's possible that the burn occurred on the next pass around 1554-1605 UTC leading to a reentry just east of Australia around 1630 UTC. However, a burn immediately after the failed intercept, at around 1410 UTC, would lead to entry about 1450 UTC in the more usual disposal zone well to the east of New Zealand.


Kosmos-910 
 

DateTimeEventOrbit  

1977 May 23  1214:51 Launch by 11K69  KB 
 1217  Stage 2 burn 
 1220  Stage 2 sep 
1977 May 23   90.6 141x465x65.1 
1977 May 23   465x1775x65.9? (NLJ) 
1977 May 23 1402? Failed to intercept K909 
 1415? Deorbit  60? x 1400? x 66 
1977 May 23 1450? reentered 

May 13,2026

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