Jonathan's Space Report No. 598 2008 Aug 12, Somerville, MA ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- STS-125 (Hubble Servicing Mission 4) ------------------------------------ Preparations for launch of Atlantis to refurbish the Hubble Space Telescope are advancing. External Tank ET-127 and solid boosters RSRM-103 (stack BI-135) are assembled in Vehicle Assembly Building High Bay 3. Orbiter 104 (Atlantis) is in Orbiter Processing Facility bay 1. Atlantis will carry the SLIC (Super Lightweight Interchangeable Carrier), with Wide Field Camera 3 , batteries and a radiator; the ORU Carrier with the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph and FGS-3R instruments; the FSS (Flight Support Structure) for berthing HST, and the MULE (Multi-Use Lightweight Equipment carrier, for support equipment). Ariane 5ECA ------------ Ariane 5 vehicle L541, flight V184 was launched from Kourou on Jul 7. It carried Protostar 1 and Badr 6 into orbit. Protostar 1 is an SS/Loral LS-1300 satellite with a mass of 1774 kg dry 4191 kg fuelled. It is owned by Protostar Ltd. of Bermuda and its subsidiary Protostar Satellite Systems of San Francisco. I believe the launch contract is with the US subsidiary, and I am therefore counting Protostar as a US satellite (I imagine the Bermuda address is just for some kind of tax reason). Badr 6 is an Astrium Eurostar 2000+ satellite for Arabsat of Riyadh; it is also known as Arabsat 4AR, and replaces Arabsat 4A which was lost in a 2006 Proton launch failure. Falcon 1 -------- Falcon 1 flight 003 was launched from Omelek Island at 0334 UTC on Aug 3, but two minutes after launch the mission failed. According to information released by SpaceX, the problem occurred when stage 1 failed to separate from stage 2. The improved Merlin 1C first stage engine completed its burn successfully, but a longer than expected first stage shutdown meant that the stage was still thrusting when stage 2 tried to separate, and the two stages briefly recontacted. The stages fell in the Pacific; SpaceX boss Elon Musk reports that the first stage reached 217 km altitude, the second stage ignited correctly, and the fairing separated - which was due to happen at 3min 13s after launch, implying that the stage remained intact at that point. Musk was reported by spaceflightnow.com as saying that 'Neither stage exploded. They just got a little bit cooked.' Presumably the recontact caused the second stage to tumble during the burn. The rocket carried the 83 kg Trailblazer satellite, a test of a new SpaceDev bus as part of the DoD's Operationally Responsive Space program. Two 3 kg nanosatellites from NASA Ames Research Center were also aboard, and two Celestis burial capsules containing cremated remains were attached to the second stage. Echostar 11 ----------- The Echostar 11 satellite was launched on Jul 16 by a Sea Launch Zenit-3SL. The satellite will provide television broadcasting for the Dish Network. By Jul 24 it was in a 35685 x 35791 km x 0.1 deg orbit drifting over 140W. SAR-Lupe 5 ----------- Germany's fifth SAR-Lupe radar satellite was launched by a Russian Kosmos-3M on Jul 22 into a 470 x 500 km x 98.1 deg orbit. Kosmos-2440 ------------ According to correspondents on the nasaspaceflight.com site, the upper stage used to launch Kosmos-2440 was an old 11S861 Blok DM-2, redesignated DM-3 (or DM3) for reasons that are unclear. Kosmos-2441 ----------- Kosmos-2441 was launched from Plesetsk on Jul 26 by a three-stage Soyuz-2-1b rocket into a 195 x 726 x 98.3 deg orbit. It is believed to be the first in a new series of Russian military imaging recon satellites, reportedly designated Persona. On Jul 31 the orbit was raised to 714 x 732 km. Erratum -------- Carl Rigg points out that the Zhongxing 9 (Chinasat 9) launch was Jun 9, not Jun 10. Table of Recent (orbital) Launches ---------------------------------- Date UT Name Launch Vehicle Site Mission INTL. DES. Jun 9 1215 Zhongxing 9 Chang Zheng 3B Xichang Comms 28A Jun 11 1605 GLAST Delta 7920H Canaveral SLC17B Astronomy 29A Jun 12 2205 Skynet 5C ) Ariane 5ECA Kourou ELA3 Comms 30A Turksat 3A ) Comms 30B Jun 19 0636 Orbcomm CDS-1 ) Kosmos-3M Kapustin Yar LC107 Comms 31 Orbcomm R-1 ) Comms 31 Orbcomm R-2 ) Comms 31 Orbcomm R-3 ) Comms 31 Orbcomm R-4 ) Comms 31 Orbcomm R-5 ) Comms 31 Jun 20 0746 Jason 2 Delta 7320 Vandenberg SLC2W Rem Sens. 32A Jun 26 2359 Kosmos-2440 Proton-K/DM-3 Baykonur LC81/24 Early Warn 33A Jul 7 2147 Protostar 1 ) Ariane 5ECA Kourou ELA3 Comms 34 Badr 6 ) Comms 34 Jul 16 0520 Echostar 11 Zenit-3SL SL Odyssey, POR Comms 35A Jul 22 0240 SAR-Lupe 5 Kosmos-3M Plesetsk Radar 36A Jul 26 1831 Kosmos-2441 Soyuz-2-1B Plesetsk LC43/4 Imaging 37A Aug 3 0334 Trailblazer ) Falcon 1 Omelek Tech F01 PreSat ) Tech F01 Nanosail-D ) Tech F01 Celestis ) Burial F01 .-------------------------------------------------------------------------. | Jonathan McDowell | phone : (617) 495-7176 | | Somerville MA 02143 | inter : jcm@host.planet4589.org | | USA | jcm@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 | '-------------------------------------------------------------------------'