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First Soyuz launch from Kourou to go ahead: Arianespace
by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) Aug 25, 2011

illustration only

The maiden flight of a Soyuz from Europe's space base will go ahead as scheduled on October 20, as it is a different version from the rocket involved in Wednesday's launch failure by Russia, Arianespace said on Thursday.

"The problem that occurred yesterday is linked to a third-stage motor, and the Soyuz model that we will be using uses a different third stage," Jean-Yves Le Gall, president and chief executive of the launch company, told AFP.

"It is not the same version of the rocket."

The European Space Agency (ESA) and Russia are deploying Soyuz at Kourou, French Guiana, under a 2003 accord to provide a mid-sized launcher for Arianespace, which markets ESA's launch vehicles.

The model that will be deployed there is a Soyuz-ST, a spinoff of the Soyuz-2. It is designed to take nearly three tonnes into geostationary transfer orbit.

Its first flight will lift the first two satellites in Europe's Galileo navigation system, the competitor to the US Global Positioning System (GPS).

"In principle, the launch date of October 20 is confirmed, because the Soyuz being used for Galileo is not impacted by yesterday's failure," said Le Gall.

An unnamed Russian official told the Interfax news agency on Thursday that "the launch of Soyuz carrier rockets" had been suspended until the loss of a unmanned craft taking cargo to the International Space Station (ISS) had been explained.

The move has caused a ripple of concern for the crew of the ISS, as the Soyuz, a workhorse of space for half a century, is used both as a launcher for cargo and for passenger vehicles.

If the Soyuz-launched Progress freigher is out of operation, that will leave the ISS with ESA's Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV) and Japan's H-II Transfer Vehicle (HTV).

The latest ATV, Edoardo Amaldi, is currently being brought by ship to Kourou.

"Its scheduled launch is February 28 2012," said Le Gall, who said there was "a small margin" for bringing it forward if need be, but this would only be by a few days given the tight schedule.

The ISS has capsules moored to the station enabling all crew onboard to return to Earth, either on scheduled missions or in an emergency.




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Russia postpones upcoming Soyuz rocket launch
Moscow (AFP) Aug 25, 2011 - Russia has postponed the next blast-off of its Soyuz rocket until September after a freighter carried by the flagship launch vehicle crashed into Earth, the space forces commander said Thursday.

A Soyuz-2 rocket was to have launched a Russian GLONASS navigation satellite this week from the Plesetsk cosmodrome to help create a system Russia hopes will rival the US GPS.

"The launch has been postponed until the first half of September," Lieutenant General Oleg Ostapenko was quoted as saying by Russian news agencies. "The decision has been taken to remove the rocket from the launch pad."

He said that the rocket will be subjected to a thorough test of all its component parts once it is removed and that the September launch date was not final.

His remarks are in line with a review by the Russian space agency Roskosmos of all its rockets and also confirm comments by an unnamed space official earlier to Russian media that the Soyuz rockets have been grounded pending the probe.

Ostapenko insisted that the delay would not hurt the GLONASS system, already hurt by the loss of three satellites after a launch failure in December.

"We decided not to hurry and not to put pressure. If we launch it one month later, it's no big deal," he said.

The announcement comes after an unmanned Progress space ship carrying tonnes of cargo for the International Space Station (ISS) crashed into Siberia shortly after blast-off Wednesday.

Ostapenko commented only on the upcoming GLONASS launch and gave no further details on future launch plans, including manned missions to the ISS.





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Draper Laboratory began work this month on a new spacesuit that could keep NASA astronauts healthy during long-duration space exploration missions and stabilize them while they work in microgravity. NASA commissioned the work through its NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) program, which funds efforts based on their potential to enhance future space missions. The suit aims to st ... read more


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