7 января 2009
« 2009
« January
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
   1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 

All news [archive]

Spacewalkers Help Detach Space Station Solar Power Tower

Astronauts freed an old solar power truss atop the International Space Station.  Read more…

Russian Rocket Launches Science Satellite Into Orbit

16.09.2007 00:00 News - Source: space.com

MOSCOW (AP) - A Russian scientific satellite was launched into orbit aboard a Soyuz rocket Friday, just eight days after another Russian-built rocket crashed destroying a Japanese satellite and spreading toxic chemicals.

The Soyuz-U rocket lifted off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 3 p.m. (1100 GMT) and arrived at a geostationary orbit eight minutes later, said Alexander Vorobyov, spokesman for the Federal Space Agency.

During its 12-day mission, the satellite Foton-M3 will conduct nearly four dozen experiments set up by European, Russian and Chinese scientists to study bone tissue cells, protein crystals and other areas. Several of the experiments also include measurements on butterfly pupae, snails and geckos.

The satellite also includes a student-built "space mail" delivery system and tether experiment, according to the European Space Agency.

Earlier this week, Kazakhstan suspended all launches of Russian-built Proton rockets, following a crash that destroyed a Japanese communications satellite and spread toxic chemicals over the Kazakh steppe.

The crash on Sept. 6 was the second time in the past 14 months that an unmanned Russian rocket launched from the Russian-leased cosmodrome has strewn rocket fuel and debris.

Russia has been aggressively trying to expand its presence in the international market for commercial and government satellite and space-industry launches, though its efforts have seen several high-profile failures.

Russia pays US$115 million (euro94 million) annually for the use of Baikonur under a deal effective through 2050.

SPACE.com Staff contributed to this report.

Original text is here

www.sitename.com

  Add comment

Name: 
E-Mail: 
Comment: 
Enter code: 


© 2007 SpaceTimes.net. All rights reserved. Terms of Use and Disclaimer.