Jonathan's Space Report No. 514 2003 Nov 24, Cambridge, MA ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Shuttle and Station -------------------- The Expedition 8 crew of Foale and Kaleri continue their stay aboard the Station. The Shuttle fleet remains grounded with return to flight expected in the second half of 2004. Recent Launches --------------- China has launched a new communications satellite, Zhongxing-20. The CZ-3A launch vehicle took off from Xichang at 1601 UTC on Nov 14 and reached low parking orbit at 1611 UTC. A second burn of the cryogenic third stage put ZX-20 in elliptical transfer orbit of 212 x 41981 km x 24.5 deg at around 1625 UTC. The satellite is probably part of the Feng Huo military communications system. By Nov 20 it was in geostationary orbit over 103 deg E. This was the fourth Chinese launch in a month. It looks like Space Command now agree with my assessment that the low perigee object from the Oct 21 Chinese launch is the rocket stage; the identities of objects 28058 and 28059 were swapped on Oct 29-30. Meanwhile ZY-1 No. 2 (CBERS-2) has raised its orbit to 773 x 773 km x 98.5 deg. The Chinese recoverable satellite launched on Nov 3 is thought to be a successor to the FSW (Fanhui Shi Weixing) series. Chinese space expert Chen Lan reports that it is called Jianbin 4 (JB-4, "Pathfinder"); Phillip Clark says that the earlier FSW satellites were JB-1 and that the ZY-2 satellites are also designated JB-3. On Nov 4, three objects were tracked in orbit from the FSW launch; 28078 and 28077 which are in 191 x 322 km x 63.0 deg orbits are probably the payload and final stage respectively. 28076 is in a rapidly decaying 177 x 265 km x 62.9 deg orbit and is probably a piece of debris, despite being designated 2003-51A. It probably reentered on Nov 4. A fourth piece, 28079, was cataloged later and also decayed rapidly - the two small pieces may be retro covers from the second stage. The JB-4 made small orbit raising manuevers on Nov 8 and 14. The reentry vehicle of the JB-4 separated from the main satellite at around 0142 UTC on Nov 21 and landed in Sichuan province at 0204 UTC. After separation the main satellite was tracked in a higher orbit of 192 x 357 km. The Kosmos-2399 spy satellite continues in orbit after the release of five small pieces in low orbit around Nov 19, 99 days into its mission. The Don class satellites do not normally release objects until the end of their mission, when they are sometimes destroyed by deliberate explosion. It could be that these are the first tracked pieces from such an explosion, or debris from a failed film capsule recovery attempt. The expected lifetime of Kosmos-2399 based on recent flights is 100-130 days. ESA's SMART-1 lunar probe continues to operate its ion engine, with occasional flameouts at times of high radiation. On Nov 5 it was in a 3058 x 38624 km x 6.9 deg orbit compared to its initial 672 x 35829 km x 6.9 deg trajectory. DMSP 5D-3 F16 has ejected its optics cover and cooler cover, cataloged as 2003-48D and E. Phillip Clark has pointed out that IRS-P6 is probably 2003-46B, not 2003-46A. The SMEX program ---------------- NASA's Small Explorer program has selected new candidates for the SMEX-10 and SMEX-11 missions to be launched in 2006-7. Five candidates will be studied until late 2004, and then two will be chosen to fly. SMEX was started in the early 1990s amid concerns that all of NASA's science missions cost billions and took decades to complete. There have been 7 SMEX launches so far, with one more being built and other recently cancelled. Satellite Launch Orbit (km x km x deg) Mission SMEX-1/SAMPEX 1992 Jul 3 515 x 691 x 81.7 Earth radiation belts SMEX-2/FAST 1996 Aug 21 350 x 4169 x 83.0 Auroral studies SMEX-3/TRACE 1998 Apr 2 598 x 641 x 97.8 Solar EUV imager SMEX-4/SWAS 1998 Dec 6 634 x 699 x 70.0 Submillimeter astronomy SMEX-5/WIRE 1999 Mar 5 539 x 593 x 97.5 IR astronomy (failed) SMEX-6/HESSI 2002 Feb 5 588 x 609 x 38.0 Solar Hard X-ray imager SMEX-7/GALEX 2003 Apr 28 690 x 698 x 29.0 UV astronomical survey SMEX-8/SPIDR Cancelled SMEX-9/AIM 2006? 500 x 500 x 97? Noctilucent clouds The new candidates are: DUO Dark Universe Observatory DUO carries seven X-ray telescopes each with a 1.6m focal length, giving a wide 3 square degree field of view with 45-arcsecond spatial resolution (compare Chandra's ACIS with 0.5-arcsecond resolution but only 0.1 square degree field of view). DUO's CCD imagers, based on the EPIC-pn from XMM-Newton, will operate in the 0.3-10 keV range and scan 6000 square degrees around the North Galactic cap and is expected to discover 8000 clusters of galaxies and over 100000 active nuclei. The cluster data will be used to constrain cosmological models. (DUO is based on the German ABRIXAS mission, which would have done an all-sky survey, but whose power supply failed soon after launch). DUO is led by Richard Griffiths from CMU. IBEX Interstellar Boundary Explorer The IBEX mission is the only one of the proposals to study particles rather than photons, making use of the remarkable ENA (energetic neutral atom) imager technology previously pioneered in near-Earth space physics to map out the physics of the heliopause. The satellite will carry two ENA imagers, one for high energy and one for low energy particles, and will be boosted beyond the Earth's magnetosphere to allow it to detect and map out the distribution of energetic particles that are created in the shock region between the solar wind and the interstellar medium, and eventually reach the vicinity of the Earth. IBEX will be boosted into a highly elliptical Earth orbit. If selected, it would be the first SMEX in high orbit. The mission is led by David McComas at Southwest Research Institute. NEXUS Normal Incidence EUV Spectrometer This NASA-Goddard mission will observe the solar corona in the 450-800 Angstrom range and try to get clues to the coronal heating mechanisms. The normal incidence telescope, which has been flown on sounding rockets, allows better spatial resolution, allowing NEXUS to get individual spectra of the small flare regions on the Sun so spectacularly imaged by the earlier TRACE mission. PI is J. Davila. NuStar Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array NuStar would be the first mission to fly a focussing telescope in space for energies in the 8-80 keV range. It will survey this energy band for X-ray emission from quasars and Galactic black hole binaries, and obtain spectra of hard X-ray emission from supernova remnants and study the spectral lines created by nuclear transitions which dominate this spectral range. The mission is led by Fiona Harrison (Caltech). JMEX Jupiter Magnetosphere Explorer The JMEX project would put an ultraviolet observatory in low Earth orbit, will all of its observing time dedicated to looking at Jupiter and its environment. Ultraviolet emission comes from Jupiter itself, its aurora, the moon Io, and the plasma torus in Io's orbit, and the study will characterize the dominant processes in the Jovian magnetosphere. The mission is led by N. Schneider at the University of Colorado. Table of Recent Launches ----------------------- Date UT Name Launch Vehicle Site Mission INTL. DES. Oct 1 0403 Galaxy 13 Zenit-3SL SL Odyssey Comms 44B Oct 15 0100 Shenzhou 5 ) CZ-2F Jiuquan Spaceship 45A SZ-5 OM ) Imaging 45G Oct 17 0452 IRS-P6 PSLV Sriharikota Imaging 46B Oct 18 0538 Soyuz TMA-3 Soyuz-FG Baykonur Spaceship 47A Oct 18 1617 DMSP F16 Titan 23G Vandenberg Weather 48A Oct 21 0316 ZY-1 No. 2 ) CZ-4B Taiyuan Imaging 49A CX-1 ) Comms 49B Oct 30 1343 SERVIS-1 Rokot Plesetsk Tech 50A Nov 3 0720 JB-4? CZ-2D Jiuquan Micrograv 51C Nov 14 1601 Zhongxing-20 CZ-3A Xichang Comms 52A .-------------------------------------------------------------------------. | Jonathan McDowell | phone : (617) 495-7176 | | Somerville MA 02143 | | | c/o | | | Center for Astrophysics, | | | 60 Garden St, MS6 | | | Cambridge MA 02138 | inter : jcm@host.planet4589.org | | USA | jmcdowell@cfa.harvard.edu | | | | JSR: http://www.planet4589.org/jsr.html | | Back issues: http://www.planet4589.org/space/jsr/back | | Subscribe/unsub: mail majordomo@host.planet4589.org, (un)subscribe jsr | '-------------------------------------------------------------------------'