Jonathan's Space Report No. 741 2017 Oct 6 Somerville, MA --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Apologies for the long gap since the last issue, I've been busy. International Space Station --------------------------- Dragon CRS-12 was launched on Aug 14 at 1631 UTC and arrived at the ISS on Aug 16. The Canadarm-2 grappled CRS-12 at 1032 UTC and the Dragon was berthed at the Harmony nadir port at 1302 to 1307 UTC. On Aug 17 astronauts Yurchikin, in suit Orlan-MKS No. 4, and Ryazanskiy, in Orlan-MK No. 6, performed spacewalk VKD-43. They threw five small satellites into space and retrieved and installed materials exposure experiments. Depressurization time was 7hr 58 min; hatch open-to-close time was 7h 34 min. This was the first use of the new Orlan-MKS model spacesuit. On Sep 2 at 2158 UTC Soyuz MS-04 undocked from the Poisk module with Yurchikin, Fischer and Whitson. At undocking, Expedition 53 began. The Soyuz MS-04 spacecraft landed at 0121 UTC Sep 3. Soyuz MS-05 remains docked to the Rassvet module. On Sep 12 Soyuz MS-06 was launched from Baykonur with astronauts Aleksandr Misurkin, Mark Vande Hei, and Joe Acaba. The Soyuz docked at the Poisk module at 0255 UTC and the hatch to ISS was opened at 0508 UTC. On Sep 16 at about 2000 UTC Dragon CRS-12 was unberthed from Harmony; it was released at 0840 UTC Sep 17. After a deorbit burn at 1324 UTC it splashed down SW of Los Angeles near 120.9W 32.4N at about 1414 UTC. Astronauts Bresnik and VandeHei, in suits EMU 3003 and 3008 respectively, made spacewalk US EVA-44 on Oct 5. The airlock was depressurized around 1200 UTC and repressurized at 1900 UTC. They replaced one of the LEE (Latching End Effector) systems on the end of the Canadarm-2 (SSRMS, Space Station Remote Manipulator System). The Canadarm-2 was launched in 2001; it has a LEE on each end (LEE-A and LEE-B). The LEE is around 190 kg and about a metre long. One LEE grabs the ISS and the other a satellite (like Dragon) or station component to be moved. The arm can 'walk' across the station by alternately grabbing ISS at each end, first using A as its 'foot' then B and then A, etc. There is also a LEE on the MBS POA. The MBS (Mobile Base System) is a device that sits on the MT (Mobile Transporter) truck that goes up and down the truss railway. The SSRMS can attach itself to the MBS and be moved along the truss to work on different parts of the station. MBS has four PDGF (Power/Data Grapple Fixture) attachment points; it also has a device called the POA (Payload/ORU Accommodations) for temporary storage of a cargo, and this POA has a LEE on it. There are five LEE systems on the ISS: LEE S/N 201, acting as LEE-B on the SSRMS. LEE S/N 202, acting as LEE-A on the SSRMS until Oct 5. LEE S/N 203, acting as the LEE on the MBS POA until Oct 5. Launched in 2002. LEE S/N 204, a spare LEE stored on Express Logistics Carrier 1 (ELC-1). Launched in 2009. LEE S/N 301, attached to the Dextre SPDM robot arm. Launched in 2008. In addition, there's another spare LEE on Earth. The most heavily used LEEs are the ones on the end of the Canadarm and LEE 202 has been showing degraded behaviour recently. During the spacewalk it was swapped with LEE 203, so now LEE 203 is on the Canadarm-2 and LEE 202 is on the less-frequently-used MBS POA. Blagovest --------- On Aug 16 a Khrunichev Proton was launched from Baykonur carrying the Blagovest No. 11L military communications satellite, which was later given the code name Kosmos-2520. Blagovest is built by Reshetnev and uses the Ekspress-2000 bus. TDRS-M ------ A United Launch Alliance Atlas V 401 placed the TDRS M satellite in geotransfer orbit on Aug 18. TDRS M (to be renamed TDRS 13 in service) is a NASA Tracking and Data Relay Satellite. Sputnik-Inspektor ----------------- The Kosmos-2519 satellite launched in June made small orbit adjustments on Jul 27 and Aug 3 to a 649 x 668 km orbit. On Aug 23, according to the Russian Ministry of Defense, it released a 'small satellite-inspector' (maliy sputnik-inspektor) whose mission is to observe other Russian satellites. Most likely the satellite's first task is to observe the Kosmos-2519 host satellite, described as a generic platform for carrying experiments. The inspector is thought to be designated Kosmos-2521. Formosat-5 ---------- SpaceX launched a Falcon 9 from Vandenberg on Aug 24 carrying the Formosat-5 imaging satellite for Taiwan's National Space Office (NSPO, Guojia Taikong Zhongxin). Formosat-5 has a mass of only 525 kg, much less than F9 could carry to this orbit. The F9 S/N B1038 first stage landed downrange on the 'Just Read The Instructions'; the second stage completed just more than 1 orbit and was deorbited in the South Pacific east of New Zealand. ORS-5 ----- ORS-5 is a space surveillance satellite (also called SensorSat) for the US Air Force Operationally Responsive Space office (Kirtland AFB, New Mexico). The satellite was inserted into equatorial LEO to monitor debris and satellites in the GEO belt. A 5-stage Minotaur IV was used to orbit the satellite. Stage 4, with an Orion 38 motor, inserted the stack in a 400 x 600 km x 24.6 deg parking orbit. Stage 5, with a second Orion 38, made the plane change to reach 599 x 604 km x 0.02 deg. Three cubesats were ejected into the parking orbit: two for Los Alamos (probably the 1.5U comm satellites Prometheus 2.2 and 2.4) and one for DARPA, understood to be the 3U cubesat DARPA High Frequency Receiver experiment developed by Utah's SDL. The DoD has cataloged three pieces of debris but has not cataloged the cubesats. (Of course, the claimed 'debris' may well be the cubesats; it will be interesting to see what the US registers with the UN). PSLV-C39 --------- On Aug 31 launch C39 of the PSLV rocket ended in failure when the payload fairing (`heat shield' in ISRO parlance) failed to separate. The extra mass caused stage 3 to be low and slow at cutoff; instead of reaching apogee of 170 km and impacting off the coast of Chile it probably reached only 155 km and crashed near Borneo. The fourth stage, PS4, was also slowed by the extra mass, reaching a 166 x 6556 km orbit instead of the planned 284 x 20650 km. It appears that the IRNSS-1H navigation satellite may have separated from the PS4 payload adapter but remains trapped withing the attached nose fairing, resulting in a single object in orbit with a mass of about 2600 kg dry plus 827 kg of propellant. According to ISRO the propellant was successfully vented during the first day in orbit. On Sep 1 two debris objects were cataloged in a similar orbit, but since Sep 7 no orbital data has been released from them. X-37B ----- The fifth flight of the X-37B Orbital Test Vehicle project (and probably the third flight of spacecraft number 1) began on Sep 7. This was the first X-37 launch on a Falcon 9; the B1040 core stage landed back at Cape Canaveral's Landing Zone 1. The spacecraft was also given the code name USA 277. Proton launches --------------- Amazonas-5, for Spanish operator Hispasat's Brazilian Hispamar subsidiary, was launched on Sep 11. Amazonas-5 is an SSL/MDA 1300 satellite bus with a launch mass of 5900 kg, built at Loral/Palo Alto. Asiasat-9 for the Hong Kong operator Asiasat, launched on Sep 28. Asiasat 9 is also an SSL/MDA 1300 bus, with a launch mass of 6141 kg. Uragan No. 752 ---------------- A new GLONASS-M navigation satellite, vehicle Uragan-M No. 752 or GLONASS M-52, also codenamed Kosmos-2522, was launched into 12-hour orbit on Sep 22. USA 278 ------- A ULA Atlas 5 placed an NRO satellite in highly elliptical orbit on Sep 24. The satellite is thought to host a signals intelligence payload (possibly codenamed RAVEN) and the HEO-4 missile early warning package. The Centaur stage was deorbited after one revolution. YG-30-01 -------- The Chinese space program returned to flight on Sep 29 after a pause following the June ZX-9A launch mishap. The CZ-2C, in a rare flight from Xichang, placed three satellites in orbit. The satellites are called Yagoan 30 hao 01 zu 01,02,03 xing (Resource No. 30 Group 01 Sat 01,02,03). They appear to be a new series, possibly replacing the higher orbit triplets Yaogan 9, 16, 1 7, 20, 25. The name is odd, since the previous Yaogan series launch in May 2016 was called Yaogan 30 (Yaogan 30 hao weixing) but appears to be unrelated. It's possible that the Chinese authorities lost track of the count and should have named the new launch Yaogan 31-01. Ariane L5100 ------------ Ariane 5 vehicle L5100, flight VA239 was launched into geotransfer orbit on 2017 Sep 29 with two communications satellites: the 3520 kg BSAT-4a for BSAT Corp of Tokyo (a Loral 1300 bus) and the 6538 kg Intelsat 37e (a Boeing 702MP bus) for Intelsat. Osiris-Rex ---------- NASA's OSIRIS-Rex space probe made a 17200 km flyby of Earth on Sep 22 with closest approach at 1653 UTC. It left the Earth's gravitational Hill sphere on Sep 25 at 0849 UTC and is now in a 0.87 x 1.31 AU x 6.4 deg solar orbit on course for rendezvous with minor planet (101955) Bennu in Aug 2018. Cassini ------- The Cassini spacecraft was launched in 1997 and entered Saturn orbit in 2004. Following a remarkable series of scientific discoveries, the spacecraft was placed in a disposal orbit with final apoapsis at 0539 UTC on Sep 12, 1.2 million km from Saturn. From there it fell towards the planet, picking up speed, and entered Saturn's atmosphere on Sep 15 at a speed of 34.3 km/s (123660 km/hr). The spacecraft tumbled and broke up at 1032:16 UTC, sending out its last radio signal which reached Earth at 1155:42 UTC. Table of Recent Orbital Launches ---------------------------------- Date UT Name Launch Vehicle Site Mission INTL. Catalog Perigee Apogee Incl Notes Aug 1 0703 Silu-1 Tianzhou-1, LEO Tech 21F S42903 385 x 395 x 42.8 Aug 2 0158 OptSat-3000 ) Vega Kourou Imaging 44A S42900 440 x 450 x 97.2 Ven{\mu}s ) Imaging 44B S42901 720 x 724 x 98.4 Aug 14 1631 Dragon CRS-12 Falcon 9 Kennedy LC39A Cargo 45A S42904 204 x 353 x 51.6 Aug 16 2207 Kosmos-2520 Proton-M/Briz-M Baykonur LC81/24 Comms 46A S42907 35511 x 35766 x 0.1 Aug 17 1510 Tomsk-TPU-120 ISS, LEO Tech 98-67MZ S42910? 401 x 408 x 51.6 Aug 17 1515 Tanyusha YuZGU No. 1 ISS, LEO Tech 98-67NA S42911? 401 x 408 x 51.6 Aug 17 1516 Tanyusha YuZGU No. 2 ISS, LEO Tech 98-67NB S42912? 401 x 408 x 51.6 Aug 17 1521 TNS-0-2 ISS, LEO Tech 98-67NC S42913? 401 x 408 x 51.6 Aug 17 1529 TS530-Zerkalo ISS, LEO Tech 98-67ND S42914? 401 x 408 x 51.6 Aug 18 1229 TDRS M Atlas V 401 Canaveral SLC41 Comms 47A S42915 4647 x 35753 x 26.2 Aug 19 0529 Michibiki-3 H2A 204 Tanegashima Nav 48A S42917 344 x 35392 x 19.9 Aug 23 Kosmos-2521 Kosmos-2519, LEO Tech 37D S42919 654 x 669 x 98.0 Aug 24 1851 Formosat-5 Falcon 9 Vandenberg SLC4E Imaging 49A S42920 717 x 730 x 98.3 Aug 26 0604 ORS-5 ) Minotaur IV Canaveral SLC46 SpaceSurv 50A S42921 599 x 604 x 0.0 Prometheus 2.2? ) Comms 50C? S42922 388 x 602 x 24.52 Prometheus 2.4? ) Comms 50D? S42923 384 x 603 x 24.53 DHFR ) Tech 50B? S42924 430 x 597 x 24.52 Aug 31 1330 IRNSS-1H PSLV-XL Satish Dhawan SLP Nav 51A S42928 166 x 6556 x 19.16 Sep 7 1400 X-37B OTV-5 Falcon 9 Kennedy LC39A Spaceplane 52A S42932 350?x 350?x 43? Sep 11 1923 Amazonas 5 Proton-M/Briz-M Baykonur LC200/39 Comms 53A S42934 4360 x 35270 x 22.8 Sep 12 2117 Soyuz MS-06 Soyuz-FG Baykonur LC1 Spaceship 54A S42937 192 x 240 x 51.6 Sep 22 0002 Kosmos-2522 Soyuz-2-1B/Fregat Plesetsk LC43-4 Nav 55A S42939 19130 x 19160 x 64.8 Sep 24 0549 USA 278 Atlas V 541 Vandenberg SLC3E Sigint 56A S42941 2100?x 37800?x 62.8 Sep 28 1852 Asiasat-9 Proton-M/Briz-M Baykonur LC200/39 Comms 57A S42942 4014 x 35848 x 23.4 Sep 29 0421 YG-30 01 zu 01 xing ) Chang Zheng 2C Xichang Sigint 58A S42945 592 x 601 x 35.0 YG-30 01 zu 02 xing ) Sigint 58B S42946 592 x 601 x 35.0 YG-30 01 zu 03 xing ) Sigint 58C S42947 594 x 601 x 35.0 Sep 29 2156 BSAT-4a ) Ariane 5 ECA Kourou ELA3 Comms 59B S42951 265 x 35617 x 5.9 Intelsat-37e ) Comms 59A S42952 263 x 35693 x 6.0 Table of Recent Suborbital Launches ----------------------------------- Date UT Payload/Flt Name Launch Vehicle Site Mission Apogee/km Target Aug 2 0910 GT223GM Minuteman 3 Vandenberg LF10 Test 1000? Kwajalein Aug 13 0930 Rocksat-X 7 Terrier Imp.Mal. Wallops Education 151 Atlantic Aug 23 RV DF-4 Taiyuan, China Test 1000? China Aug 23 Hyunmoo RV Hyunmoo-2B? Anhueng, S Korea Test 100? E China Sea Aug 23 Hyunmoo RV Hyunmoo-2B? Anheung, S Korea Test 100? E China Sea Aug 24? Hyunmoo RV Hyunmoo-2B? Anheung, S Korea Test 100? E China Sea Aug 25 2149 RV Hwasong 5? Kittareyong, N.Korea Training? 100? Sea of Japan Aug 25 2219 RV Hwasong 5? Kittareyong, N.Korea Training? 100? Sea of Japan Aug 28 2058 RV Hwasong 12 Pyongyang-Sunan, N.K. Test 550 Pacific Ocean Aug 29 FTM-27E2 Target MRBM-T3? Kauai Target 300? Pacific Ocean Sep 3 Hyunmoo RV Hyunmoo-2B? Unknown site,S Korea Test 100? Sea of Japan Sep 9 1134 WINDY 1 Black Brant 9 Kwajalein Ionosphere 409 Pacific Sep 9 1139 WINDY 2 Terrier Malemute Kwajalein Ionosphere 400? Pacific Sep 12 RV x4? Yars Plesetsk Test 1000? Kura Sep 14 2157 RV Hwasong 12 Pyongyang-Sunan, N.K. Test 770 Pacific Ocean Sep 14 2330? RV Hyunmoo-2A? Goseung, S Korea? Test 100? Sea of Japan Sep 17 PTV Janus Wake Island Target 300? Kwajalein Sep 20 RV x4? Yars Plesetsk Test 1000? Kura Sep 26 1530? Topol-E RV Topol'-E Kapustin Yar Test 1000? Sary Shagan .-------------------------------------------------------------------------. | Jonathan McDowell | | | Somerville MA 02143 | inter : planet4589 at gmail | | USA | twitter: @planet4589 | | | | JSR: http://www.planet4589.org/jsr.html | | Back issues: http://www.planet4589.org/space/jsr/back | | Subscribe/unsub: http://www.planet4589.org/mailman/listinfo/jsr | '-------------------------------------------------------------------------'