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Электронная библиотека астронома-любителя. Книги по астрономии, телескопостроению, оптике.
Дата: 19 мая 1998 (1998-05-19)
От: Alexander Bondugin
Тема: SpaceViews Update - 1998 May 15 [1/7]
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S P A C E V I E W S U P D A T E
1998 May 15
http://www.seds.org/spaceviews/980515/
*** Top Stories ***
HGS-1 Rounds Moon in Salvage Effort
Goldin Says Russian-Built Service Module a Mistake
Activists Outraged Over "BitFlip" Silencing
*** Technology ***
Columbia Lands Safely
NASA Nixes Neurolab Reflight
Study Says Station Launch Failures Likely
Proton and Titan Launches Successful
*** Policy ***
Mir Deorbit Burn Delayed
Report: Protocols Needed for Reporting Threatening Asteroids
Japan Questions Need for Small Launcher
*** Science ***
Scientists Puzzled by Brilliant Cosmic Burst
Did Deadly Dust Do in the Dinosaurs?
Is "Deep Impact" Real or Just Reel?
Black Hole Feeds on Colliding Galaxy
*** CyberSpace ***
Space Day
John Glenn: Three Orbits to History
ProSpace
Rocketry.Org
*** Space Capsules ***
SpaceViews Event Horizon
Other News
*** Top Stories ***
HGS-1 Rounds Moon in Salvage Effort
The HGS-1 satellite became the first commercial spacecraft to go
around the Moon Wednesday, May 13, when it swung around the Moon in an
effort to place the communications satellite into a geosynchronous
orbit.
The spacecraft came within 6,290 km (3,883 mi.) of the lunar
surface at 3:50pm EDT (1950 UT) May 13. It had been occulted -- hidden
from view of the Earth -- by the Moon from approximately 2:50pm to
3:20pm EDT (1850 to 1920 UT).
HGS-1 is now on a return trajectory to the Earth and will arrive
on May 16. The first thruster burn in a series to nudge the spacecraft
into geosynchronous orbit is planned for about 11pm EDT May 16 (0300 UT
May 17). Hughes officials said the spacecraft will be tracked by ground
stations, optical telescopes, and radars prior to arrival, to confirm
its orbit.
The spacecraft, originally named AsiaSat 3, was launched
Christmas Day 1997 on a Russian Proton rocket. However, the upper stage
of the Proton failed, stranding the spacecraft in an elliptical,
inclined transfer orbit, without enough fuel on the spacecraft itself to
reach the proper orbit.
Hughes started the rescue of the satellite with a series of
burns in April and early May that gradually raised its orbit. The final
burn, on May 7, raised its orbit such that it crossed the Moon's orbit
at the time the Moon was passing by, allowing engineers to use the
Moon's gravity to adjust the orbit.
While Hughes officials said they did not "seriously consider"
this kind of salvage operation until late February, one industry insider
told SpaceViews May 4 that the idea had its genesis outside of Hughes,
about a month before.
Rex Ridenoure of Microcosm told SpaceViews that Ed Belbruno, of
Innovative Orbital Design, suggested a trajectory that used the Moon to
salvage the satellite, and following some analysis and validation at
Microcosm, Ridenoure passed that information on to Hughes in
mid-January.
Ridenoure said that the approach Belbruno and he suggested was
more radical than what Hughes eventually adopted, sending the spacecraft
beyond the Moon and using the Moon for flybys on the way out and/or
back. A wide variety of novel orbit-transfer techniques such as this
were developed by Belbruno during the past decade. Their proposal would
have saved about one-third of the stationkeeping fuel on the spacecraft,
while the Hughes approach will use nearly all the fuel.
Ridenoure believes the conditions in this situation were
"supersaturated" to allow an innovative solution like a lunar flyby to
work. "We provided that idea to them," Ridenoure said, "and everything
fell into place."
Goldin Says Russian-Built Service Module a Mistake
NASA Administrator Dan Goldin admitted in a Congressional
hearing Wednesday, May 6, that assigning a key module of the
International Space Station to Russia was an error that has seriously
hurt the project.
"In retrospect, I wish that we built the... module," Goldin told
the House Science Committee during a hearing on the International Space
Station.
Goldin was referring to the Service Module, a key component of
the station. Originally scheduled for launch in early 1998, the launch
date has slipped first to the end of 1998 and now to March or April of
1999 as assembly of the module falls further behind schedule.
Goldin was more critical of Russian participation in the project
than in past Congressional appearances. "I'm very frustrated and angry
at the leadership in Russia who doesn't do what they say they are going
to do," he said.
Goldin said NASA is working on a new timeline for the assembly
of the station and expects to have it completed by June 15 -- one month
later than what NASA Associate Administrator Joe Rothenberg promised in
another Congressional hearing in March.
The new timeline, Goldin said, will include contingency plans
for moving forward on the station without key Russian components. That
timeline will be approved at a "Heads of Agencies" meeting scheduled for
the end of May in Florida.
Goldin also noted the agency was planning a response to the Cost
Assessment and Validation study, also known as the Chabrow report after
committee chairman Jay Chabrow, that was released last month. Goldin
said the key area of difference between NASA's internal studies and the
Chabrow report is the estimate of the appropriate level of reserve
funding needed for the program. The response is due out by early June.
Goldin's change of attitude towards the Russians appeared to
temper Congressional reaction to the situation, including key critics
like House Science Committee chairman James Sensenbrenner (R-WI).
Sensenbrenner was more critical of the Clinton Administration,
criticizing the President for not sending up an official from the Office
of Management and Budget to the hearing.
In a separate press release, the National Space Society also
called on President Clinton to become more involved with the station.
"Since [1993], it appears as if the Administration has been sitting on
the sidelines while a series of problems -- some in NASA's control and
many not -- have developed," NSS executive director Pat Dasch said. "It
is now incumbent upon the White House to step onto the playing field and
provide the necessary leadership to deal with Russian delays."
Goldin said Clinton is expected to discuss the status of the
station with Russian president Boris Yeltsin when the two meet during a
summit of industrialized nations later this month in England.
Hа сегодня все, пока!
=SANA=
Дата: 19 мая 1998 (1998-05-19)
От: Alexander Bondugin
Тема: SpaceViews Update - 1998 May 15 [2/7]
Привет всем!
Вот, свалилось из Internet...
Activists Outraged Over "BitFlip" Silencing
Outrage was the mood of many space activists after NASA and
Boeing allegedly silenced an employee who had been providing unofficial
updates on the status of the International Space Station.
The employee, known only by the pseudonym "BitFlip", had
provided weekly updates on the development of the station for over a
year, first on Usenet, then on the NASA Watch Web site.
A Florida Today article published May 5 identified BitFlip as
Tom Hancock, a systems and software specialist who works for Boeing in
Huntsville, Alabama.
BitFlip, who posted from an America Online address at home and
apparently used no NASA or corporate resources to send out his messages,
provided "unvarnished truth", good and bad, about the status of the
station, information that NASA or prime contractor Boeing rarely
provided on a timely basis.
However, space policy analyst Rich Kolker reported last week
that BitFlip's identity has been uncovered by NASA and forwarded on to
Boeing, his employer, who questioned him for several hours.
According to Kolker, BitFlip was not fired, but was prohibited
from posting any further reports on the space station.
"They handed me a piece of paper and said I can't publish
anything without their approval," BitFlip told Florida Today. "I'm not
going to post anything like I did before. I feel if I do, I might as
well clean out my desk."
The move was met with strong opposition by many space advocates.
"I think what NASA and the contractor has done is totally, completely
inappropriate," Kolker said in a posting in the Houston Chronicle's
Space Forum. "One does not give up the protections of the First
Amendment when one goes to work for the space program."
"What's amazing is that Bit has been and is a tremendous
supporter of ISS," Kolker added. "All he's doing is providing
information, something NASA by law... is required to provide."
"BitFlip posted nothing proprietary, confidential, or
classified," said Keith Cowing, editor of the NASA Watch Web site where
BitFlip's reports had been posted in past months. "Indeed this
information could have been gathered by any one of a thousand people on
the shop floor or in the offices at NASA."
Cowing reacted by removing most of the information from the
front page of his site and turning the background black in protest.
"There will be no NASA Watch for at least 24 hours - perhaps longer," he
wrote on the page late in the day May 4.
A number of comments to Cowing added to the NASA Watch Web site
by readers showed strong disagreement with the move by NASA and Boeing
to silence BitFlip.
There has been no public comment on the situation by NASA or
Boeing officials.
*** Technology ***
Columbia Lands Safely
The space shuttle Columbia landed safely at the Kennedy Space
Center in Florida Sunday afternoon, May 3, with a faulty power unit
having no effect on the landing.
Columbia landed at 12:09pm EDT (1609 UT) on May 3, as scheduled.
The landing was without problems as Columbia glided to a safe landing at
KSC's Runway 33.
There was some initial concern yesterday about the failure of
one of the shuttle's three Auxiliary Power Units (APUs), which provide
power for the shuttle's flaps, rudder, and other control surfaces needed
during landing. The cooling unit on APU 3 malfunctioned, overheating
the unit.
However, the shuttle can be controlled normally with only two
APUs functioning, and can still be controlled, albeit sluggishly, with
only one operating. The other two units operated normally.
Mission controllers decided Saturday to turn on APU 3 at about
six minutes before landing, so that all three units would be operating
in the final, crucial maneuvers before landing. An APU can operate for
10-12 minutes before overheating, NASA officials said.
The landing brought the mission to an end just a couple hours
shy of 16 days after launch. Mission controllers had considered
extending the mission by a day but decided on April 30 not to, when
weather forecasts called for an increased chance of poor weather on
Monday and Tuesday.
NASA was still mulling the possibility of reflying Columbia this
August on the same Neurolab mission at the time of landing, but dropped
the idea a few days later.
NASA Nixes Neurolab Reflight
NASA decided Tuesday, May 5, not to refly the shuttle Columbia
this summer on the Neurolab mission, opening up a gap in the shuttle
schedule for 1998 that could last up to five months.
NASA had considered reflying the Neurolab mission in August to
conduct more tests on the effects of weightlessness on the nervous
system. However, officials said it was more important to retain
flexibility in the shuttle schedule.
The current schedule calls for the launch of Discovery on
mission STS-91 on June 2. The nearly 10-day mission will feature the
final docking of the shuttle with the Russian space station Mir, picking
up Mir astronaut Andy Thomas.
After that the next flight will take place no earlier than
September 3, when Endeavour blasts off on STS-88, the first shuttle
mission dedicated to the International Space Station. The mission,
which will attach the Unity docking node to the FGB module launched by
Russia, may be further delayed until late in the year, NASA officials
admitted, depending on the status of the Russian-built Service Module.
If STS-88 is delayed into November the next shuttle mission
would then become STS-95, the launch of Discovery on a 16-day mission
that will feature the second space flight of Senator John Glenn. STS-95
is scheduled for an October 29 launch.
A long delay for STS-88 would mean over four and a half months
between the landing of STS-91 on June 12 and the launch of STS-95
October 29. The delay between missions would be one of the longest in
recent years for the shuttle program.
Last year NASA had planned two launches in the summer: STS-88 in
July and STS-93, the launch of Columbia carrying the AXAF X-ray
astronomy satellite, in August. However, STS-88 has been pushed back by
space station delays and STS-93 has been pushed back to at least
December 3 because of delays assembling AXAF.
STS-96, the launch of Endeavour on the second space station
mission, had been scheduled for December 9, but will likely be pushed
back to early 1999 at the earliest.
Hа сегодня все, пока!
=SANA=
Дата: 19 мая 1998 (1998-05-19)
От: Alexander Bondugin
Тема: SpaceViews Update - 1998 May 15 [3/7]
Привет всем!
Вот, свалилось из Internet...
Study Says Station Launch Failures Likely
A study published in the current issue of the British science
weekly New Scientist concludes that the failure of one or more launches
of equipment or supplies necessary to assemble the International Space
Station is almost inevitable.
The study, performed by the magazine itself, uses simple
probability techniques to show that there is a 99.5% chance that at
least one of the 93 American and Russian launches planned during the
station's assembly will fail, and that the most likely outcome is the
failure of five launches.
The figure includes 48 launches of supplies on Russian boosters,
12 launches of station hardware on Russian boosters, and 33 American
space shuttle missions.
The magazine noted that a failure of one of the 48 supply
launches would not be critical to the station, but even removing those
launches leaves a 73.6% chance of a launch failure, the magazine
concluded.
Launch failures include the destruction of the booster during
launch, placing the payload in an inaccessible orbit, and other failures
that would prevent the cargo carried by the booster from reaching the
station.
The failure of certain launches, particularly of key modules or
other segments of the station, could hold up the entire station assembly
process for two to three years until a replacement could be assembled
and launched.
"It really depends on what element fails and where in the
sequence you are," Michael Hawes, NASA's chief engineer for the station,
told New Scientist. "You might have a full delay of the manufacturing
time -- maybe two to three years."
The study assumed the odds of a successful shuttle launch at 99%
and a Russian Proton or Soyuz launch at 92%. The odds of a successful
set of launches was found by taking those odds to the power of the
number of launches -- 0.99^33 for the shuttle and 0.92^60 for the
Russian boosters -- and multiplying the results. The odds of at least
one failure came from simply taking 1 minus the successful odds.
Proton and Titan Launches Successful
A Russian Proton booster successfully launched an American
communications satellite earlier this month, while two generations of
Titan boosters launched government payloads in early May.
The Proton launched the EchoStar-4 satellite at 7:45pm EDT (2345
UT) May 7 from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. The launch
proceeded without any problems reported.
The satellite, owned by Colorado-based EchoStar Communications,
will augment existing direct TV broadcasts on EchoStar's DISH Network.
The satellite was built by Lockheed Martin Missiles and Space Company.
The Titan 4B Centaur launched a classified military satellite
from Pad 40 at Cape Canaveral at 9:38pm EDT (0138 UT) Friday, May 8.
The launch was reported as a success by officials with the Air Force and
Lockheed Martin, who built the Titan booster.
The Air Force described the Titan's payload as classified and
would not comment on its contents. Civilian observers, however, believe
the Titan booster carried a satellite into orbit capable of
eavesdropping on radio and telephone communications.
A refurbished Titan II lifted off from Vandenberg AFB,
California, at 11:52am EDT (1552 UT) Wednesday, May 13. The launch was
a success, placing a weather spacecraft into a polar orbit 830 km (515
mi.) above the Earth.
The Titan II's payload, the NOAA-K satellite, is the latest
model of the Television Infrared Observation Satellite (TIROS), a series
of weather satellites developed for NASA and the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) dating back to the early 1960s.
*** Policy ***
Mir Deorbit Burn Delayed
The Russian Space Agency has decided to postpone the beginning
of the Mir deorbiting procedure by a month, while a key Russian space
official suggested the deorbiting might be delayed further because of
problems with the International Space Station.
The Russian Space Agency announced May 8 that the first burns to
lower the orbit of Mir, originally scheduled for late May, would be
postponed until the end of June. Deputy flight director Viktor Blagov
told the Itar-Tass news agency that it would be "too costly" to begin
the deorbiting procedure before the space shuttle Discovery arrived at
Mir June 5.
A Progress resupply spacecraft, scheduled for launch later this
month from Baikonur, Kazakhstan, will bring extra fuel needed to begin
the maneuver.
Under current plans the station's orbit will be gradually
lowered from 400 km (250 mi.) to 150 km (93 mi.) before the station is
abandoned and allowed to burn up in the Earth's atmosphere at the end of
1999.
However, Blagov hinted to Reuters that the life of Mir may be
extended because of delays with the International Space Station (ISS).
"If the Alpha station continues to be delayed, Mir will continue to
fly," he told Reuters, using the old term "Alpha" to refer to ISS. "As
soon as Alpha flies, we'll take measures."
Blagov's statement seems to fly in the face of recent NASA
statements calling for Russia to deorbit Mir as soon as possible so it
can devote its full attention to ISS. In Congressional hearings earlier
this week, NASA Administrator Dan Goldin said Russia does not have the
number of launch vehicles needed to support both Mir and ISS.
Goldin's statements at that hearing, which were unusually
critical of Russian efforts, were called "unpleasant" by Russian Space
Agency officials. "What our colleague said is extremely regrettable and
unpleasant," said Alexei Krasnov, the Russia Space Agency's deputy head
of international cooperation, who also spoke at the hearing.
Meanwhile, Russia may be planning changes to their contribution
to ISS. The Interfax news agency reported May 8 that officials were
considering modifications to the modules they plan to contribute to the
space station, reducing the number of modules but refitting the
remaining modules so they serve the same purposes as before.
The report hinted that modifications could include changes to
the Functional Cargo Block (known by its Russian acronym FGB), which has
already been completed and is scheduled for launch on a Proton booster
in late summer or fall.
Hа сегодня все, пока!
=SANA=
Дата: 19 мая 1998 (1998-05-19)
От: Alexander Bondugin
Тема: SpaceViews Update - 1998 May 15 [4/7]
Привет всем!
Вот, свалилось из Internet...
Report: Protocols Needed for Reporting Threatening Asteroids
NASA and astronomers need to develop a protocol for
communicating information about potentially threatening asteroids and
comets to avoid false alarms in the future, a National Research Council
report announced Wednesday, May 13.
The report also recommended increased efforts for telescopic
studies of asteroids and comets, laboratory investigations, and mor