Category: International

Three ISS Crew Members Launch as ASTP is Remembered

Three ISS Crew Members Launch as ASTP is Remembered

UPDATE:  The launch took place as scheduled at 10:40 pm EDT.

ORIGINAL STORY:

Three new crew members for the International Space Station (ISS) are getting ready to launch in a few hours from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.   Launch time is 10:40 pm on July 14, 2012, Eastern Daylight Time (EDT), but it will be 8:40 am July 15 at the launch site.  That means the launch coincides with the 37th anniversary of the launch of the first international human spaceflight mission — the 1975 Apollo-Soyuz Test Project (ASTP). 

ASTP was a hallmark of an era of detente between the Cold War superpowers — the United States and the Soviet Union.  Three Americans (Tom Stafford, Deke Slayton, and Vance Brand) on an Apollo spacecraft docked with two Soviets (Alexei Leonov and Valeri Kubasov) aboard a Soyuz spacecraft for two days of joint operations.   A watershed event in the history of international space cooperation, it unfortunately also marked the end of the Apollo program.   Six more years would pass before the United States launched another astronaut into space on the inaugural mission of the space shuttle program.

The Soviets, however, were just ramping up their space station program, which had gotten off to a shaky start in 1971.  By the mid 1970s, however, their Salyut space stations were performing well and eventually led to the modular Mir space station.  The core Mir module was launched in 1986 and functioned as the heart of the evolving structure until the entire facility was deorbited in 2001.  

When ASTP was launched, hopes were high that it immediately would lead to additional human spaceflight cooperation with Americans on space shuttles docking with Soviet space stations.   The Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979 cooled U.S.-Soviet relations significantly, however, and such joint missions had to wait two decades.   The demolition of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 allowed U.S.-Russian space relationships to flourish, leading first to the shuttle-Mir missions of the 1990s and then to the interdependent relationship we have on ISS today.

At 10:40 pm EDT tonight, Russia’s Yuri Malenchenko, America”s Suni Williams and Japan’s Aki Hoshide will launch to the ISS, joining two Russians (Gennady Padalka and Sergei Revin) and an American (Joe Acaba) already aboard.   The even broader cooperation among the 15 partners in ISS is a fitting tribute to and successor to ASTP, which launched international human spaceflight cooperation 37 years ago.

ESA Moves Closer to Adding Another Member — Poland

ESA Moves Closer to Adding Another Member — Poland

The European Space Agency (ESA) moved closer this week to adding another new member — Poland.   When all is said and done, Poland will become ESA’s 20th member.

The ESA Council approved Poland’s accession to the ESA Convention on July 13. Poland now must go through an internal ratification process and then deposit its instruments of accession to the French government before it officially becomes an ESA member.   However, it will participate in meetings of the ESA Council as an observer until then.  It has been a “cooperating state” since 2007.

Poland will join 19 other European countries in ESA:

  • Austria
  • Belgium
  • Czech Repubic
  • Denmark
  • Finland
  • France
  • Germany
  • Greece
  • Ireland
  • Italy
  • Luxembourg
  • the Netherlands
  • Norway
  • Portugal
  • Romania
  • Spain
  • Sweden
  • Switzerland
  • the United Kingdom

Hungary, Estonia and Slovenia continue to be European Cooperating States.  

Russian Government Investigating GLONASS Contractor For Fraud

Russian Government Investigating GLONASS Contractor For Fraud

Russia’s Interior Ministry is investigating a Russian company for alleged fraud for the handling of contracts for Russia’s GLONASS navigation satellite system.

GLONASS is Russia’s equivalent to the U.S. Global Positioning System (GPS) and ensuring the system is fully operational is a very high priority for Russian President Vladimir Putin.   The system finally reached full status of 24 operational satellites that are required for three-dimensional global coverage in October 2011 after 15 years of diminished capability.  A launch failure in December 2010 that destroyed three GLONASS satellites reportedly led to the firing of several officials of Russia’s space agency, Roscosmos, including its director, Anatoly Perminov.

Perminov’s successor, Vladimir Popovkin, and GLONASS contractor Russian Space Systems are now in a battle over whether the company misused 565 million rubles ($17 million) designated for GLONASS, according to RIA Novosti.  The company is being investigated for signing fraudulent contracts, but reportedly dismisses the accusations.

Events of Interest: Week of July 9-15, 2012-update

Events of Interest: Week of July 9-15, 2012-update

The following events may be of interest in the week ahead.  The House and Senate both are in session this week.  The list has been updated with the ISU-DC “space cafe” on Tuesday featuring NASA’s Mason Peck.

Monday-Sunday, July 9-15

Tuesday, July 10

Tuesday-Wednesday, July 10-11

Wednesday, July 11

Thursday, July 12

Saturday, July 13 through Sunday, July 22

  • Committee on Space Research (COSPAR) biennial meeting, Mysore, India

 

 

 

U.S. Experts on China's Space Program Agree There Is No Race

U.S. Experts on China's Space Program Agree There Is No Race

China’s successful Shenzhou-9 mission seems to have stirred interest in what impact, if any, China’s space program should have on the U.S. space program.  Several experts on Chinese space activities have spoken at public meetings or published op-ed pieces in the past two weeks weighing in on the topic.   One issue on which they all agree is that there is no U.S.-China space race.

Some U.S. space program advocates have been attempting to reinvigorate NASA’s activities by trying to resurrect the U.S.-Soviet space race paradigm of the 1960s that shaped the Apollo program. 

At a Marshall Institute-TechAmerica Space Enterprise Council symposium on June 29, hours after Shenzhou-9 landed, Leslee Gilbert, Vice President, Van Scoyoc Associates, took the opposite view, pointing out that the American people do not seem to care about China’s human spaceflight program.   “China will have to do something new to get Americans’ attention,” she said, perhaps building a base on the Moon, but just going there would not be sufficient.  The former staff director for the House Science, Space and Technology committee argued that China is “not leading, but following.”   Noting that many people paint U.S.-China space relationships in an either-or framework — either racing or cooperating — she concludes neither is likely in the near future, especially with the strong opposition to cooperation voiced by Members of Congress like Rep. Frank Wolf (R-VA).   Gilbert’s major concern is that the American public lacks an “appetite for space” in general and “spurring a race with China won’t fix it.”   That interest “has to come from within.”

Kevin Pollpeter, Deputy Director, East Asia Program, Defense Group, Inc., gave China credit for “hitting on all cylinders” over the past ten years.  He described a broadly based space program encompassing civil and military objectives, although the Chinese space program is under the purview of the People’s Liberation Army (PLA) where such a distinction is not obvious.  Still, “China is not out to eat our lunch — yet,” he said.  Although China conducted one more launch than the United States last year, he said, we launched more satellites and Chinese satellites have “shorter lifetimes and are less capable.” 

The Heritage Foundation’s Dean Cheng agreed with Gilbert and Pollpeter that there is no U.S.-China space race.  “If they are racing with anyone, it’s with Japan and India,” and it is “a marathon not a sprint,” he said.  That is not to say that the Chinese space program does not pose challenges to the United States, he added.  China’s successes in the Shenzhou program, for example, pose a strategic challenge by signalling to the rest of the world that China has sufficient technological confidence to take the risks associated with human spaceflight, he explained.  On an operational level, China has learned lessons from U.S. conflicts such as the Persian Gulf War that future conflicts will be fought under “modern informationalized conditions” and gathering information and quickly exploiting it is critical.  “Space is how you do that,” he argued.  The United States and China are “not racing, but staring at each other warily.”

At the symposium and in an op-ed in the Washington Times on July 4, Cheng went on to rue the fact that the United States does not trumpet its own successes, such as the Voyager spacecraft leaving the solar system or the X-37B landing after more than a year of automated flight.   “One thing we do badly is using space in a non-space context,” he told the audience.  He reiterated that position in his op-ed, stating that “NASA’s products are a de facto refutation of claims of American decline, and should be used as such.”  He also warned against space cooperation with China and, domestically, advocated more engagement with the commercial sector.

Cheng also spoke to the National Research Council’s Committee on NASA’s Strategic Direction on June 25 along with Greg Kulacki from the Union of Concerned Scientists.   The two often clash on China space issues, but both agreed that there is no space race.  On that occasion, Cheng said “China is not racing the United States, it is building what it needs.”  

Kulacki sounded the same theme, that China “has been a follower, not a leader, in space,” adding that China “doesn’t have the confidence to be a leader” in this area.  He argued strongly in favor of U.S.-China space cooperation, however, calling current U.S. policy “uninformed, misguided and counterproductive.”

On the other hand, an individual who appears to have little expertise related to China’s space program or anyone else’s, argues that there is a space race and China is winning.   Douglas MacKinnon writes in the New York Times that “the humans who are now winning the space race come from the People’s Republic of China.”  MacKinnon says in the op-ed that he worked as a “consultant for NASA and the Space Shuttle team” after he left the government and has “always been a fan of humans in space.”  Apart from that, he was a press secretary to former Senator Bob Dole, a writer for Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush, worked at DOD, and now is a columnist and author.  Focusing more on China’s military space capabilities and objectives, his theme is that President Obama and Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney should make American preeminence in space a campaign issue.  He asserts that early in his presidency Obama “contemplated combining the best of the space programs at the Pentagon and NASA to compete with the rapidly accelerating Chinese space program” and should “dust off those plans.”

 

 

 

Soyuz TMA-03M Lands Safely

Soyuz TMA-03M Lands Safely

NASA astronaut Don Pettit, Russian cosmonaut Oleg Kononenko and European astronaut Andre Kuipers safely landed in Kazakhstan this morning Eastern Daylight Time (EDT). 

The three spent a total of 193 days in space, all but two of them aboard the International Space Station (ISS). The landing was at 4:14:48 EDT.

Chinese Astronauts Preparing for Return Tonight (EDT)-Update

Chinese Astronauts Preparing for Return Tonight (EDT)-Update

UPDATE:   Bob Christy’s calculation of a projected landing time of 02:03 GMT June 29 (10:03 pm tonight EDT) and the undocking time for Shenzhou-9 have been added.

China’s three-person Shenzhou-9 crew is preparing to return to Earth about 10:00 pm tonight, June 28, Eastern Daylight Time (EDT), which will be 10:00 am June 29 Beijing time (or 02:00 GMT June 29).  

The crew was launched on June 16 and this is the longest of China’s human space flight missions to date. 

China’s space program takes place at a measured pace.   The first Chinese astronaut, or taikonaut, was launched in 2003 on Shenzhou-5.   Two years later China launched Shenzhou-6 with two astronauts.  The third mission, Shenzhou-7, took place three years after that, in 2008, with a three-person crew and the first Chinese spacewalk.   The current mission is the fourth to carry a crew.   Five other Shenzhou spacecraft have been launched without crews as test flights (Shenzhou 1-4, Shenzhou-8).  Shenzhou-6 was the longest mission until now, lasting five days.

Shenzhou-9 already has undocked from the Tiangong-1 space station module.  Liu Wang conducted a manual undocking according to China’s Xinhua news service (in English).  One mission objective was to demonstrate manual docking and undocking as a test should automated systems fail.  The crew was launched on June 16 and docked with Tiangong-1 in automated mode two days later.   After spending several days adjusting to weightlessness, Liu Wang and mission commander Jing Haipeng reentered Shenzhou-9 and conducted preliminary tests in preparation for Liu Wang to perform a manual re-docking.   The third crew-member, Liu Yang, China’s first woman astronaut, remained in Tiangong-1 during this exercise.  She has been in charge of biological and medical experiments.  Later, all three entered Shenzhou-9, undocked, and manually redocked.

Xinhua did not announce the time that Shenzhou-9 undocked from Tiangong-1, but said the crew had reentered the capsule at 6:00 am Beijing Time June 28 (6:00 pm June 27 EDT).  Bob Christy at zarya.info said undocking was at 9:22 am Beijing time June 28 (01:22 GMT; 9:22 pm June 27 EDT) and calculates that landing will be at 02:03 GMT June 29 (10:03 pm tonight EDT).

Tiangong-1 will be boosted to a higher orbit until China is ready to launch the next crew, expected next year. 

Correction:  An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated that one of the three crew remained on Tiangong-1 during the manual docking exercise, but all three were in Shenzhou-9 when the spacecraft separated from and then redocked with Tiangong-1.  It was during a preliminary test that two were in Shenzhou-9 and one remained in Tiangong-1;  the two vehicles remained docked together during that test.

Shenzhou-9 Lands Safely, but With a Bump

Shenzhou-9 Lands Safely, but With a Bump

China’s Shenzhou-9 spacecraft landed as expected in Inner Mongolia at 10:00 pm Eastern Daylight Time tonight.  The landing marks the end of a successful mission that saw China’s first crewed docking with its first space station, Tiangong-1, and the flight of China’s first woman astronaut, Liu Yang.

China’s English-language television broadcast on CCTV showed excellent video of varous phases of the landing, including the spacecraft descending on its parachute.  Like Russia’s Soyuz spacecraft, small thrusters on Shenzhou spacecraft fire about 1 meter (3 feet) above the ground to cushion the landing.  It did appear that the thrusters fired, but the spacecraft hit the ground hard and flipped over.  At this moment, the crew is still inside being tended to by medical personnel as they readapt to gravity.

China has not yet released an official landing time, but Bob Christy at zarya.info puts it at 02:00:16 GMT June 29 (10:00:16 pm June 28 EDT, or 10:00:16 am June 29 Beijing time).

United Technologies Admits to 576 Export Violations; Will Pay $75 Million

United Technologies Admits to 576 Export Violations; Will Pay $75 Million

The State Department announced a consent agreement today under which United Technologies Corporation (UTC) and three of its operating units or subsidiaries will pay $75 million in fines and penalties and take remedial actions for hundreds of civil violations of export control laws and regulations in its dealings with China.   UTC subsidiary Pratt & Whitney Canada  (P&W Canada) additionally pleaded guilty in a Connecticut court to a criminal violation.

UTC voluntarily disclosed most of the 576 violations to the U.S. Government beginning in 2006 according to the State Department.  Some of the violations took place in 2002-2003 and involved the sale of engine software by P&W Canada that is being used in Chinese military attack helicopters.  The software was of U.S. origin and governed by the Arms Export Control Act (AECA) and International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR).  Because it voluntarily disclosed violations and cooperated with the investigation, the State Department did not debar the defense contractor.  However, it did impose a statutory debarment on some P&W Canada activities.

The State Department asserts that the consent agreement addresses not only the illegal exports, but “false and belated disclosures to the U.S. Government about these illegal exports, and many other compliance failures.” While acknowledging the voluntary disclosures as mitigating factors, it decided to charge the company with 576 violations “given the harm to national security and the systemic, longstanding and repeated nature of certain violations,” it said in a proposed charging letter.

The consent agreement will remain in effect for four years.  UTC will pay $20.7 million in fines, forfeitures and other penalties to the Justice Department, and $55 million to the State Department as a penalty.  The State Department suspended $20 million of the $55 million on the condition that it be used for remedial compliance measures.

Export control reform is a major goal of the aerospace industry, particularly satellite manufacturers.  Progress was recently made in that regard with release of the “Sec. 1248” report by the State and Defense Departments, and House-passage of an amendment to the FY2013 National Defense Authorization Act to ease export controls for certain satellites. The export violations revealed today do not appear to involve satellites and under the House-passed language satellite exports to China would continue to be denied in any case.  

Thus, today’s announcement may not complicate the satellite export debate, although it may undermine confidence that the aerospace industry has learned from the mistakes of the 1990s that led to the current strict export limits on satellites.

In an unrelated development, Canada’s MacDonald, Dettwiler & Associates (MDA) purchased Space Systems/Loral today for $875 million.   It was a Loral employee sending a letter to China without export approval in 1996 that initiated the chain of events that became known as the “Loral/Hughes” affair.  It led to a congressional investigation chaired by then-Rep. Christopher Cox.  The Cox Committee report concluded that Loral and Hughes Aircraft (a satellite manufacturer later bought by  Boeing) violated export laws in helping China determine why its satellite launches failed.  In response, Congress passed language in the FY1999 National Defense Authorization Act that put satellites back on the State Department’s Munitions List with its ITAR regulations.  It also removed the President’s authority to decide whether satellites are governed by ITAR or the dual-use Commerce Commerce List administered by the  Commerce Department.  The aerospace industry has been trying to undo that language ever since, claiming that ITAR restrictions put them at a significant competitive disadvantage with foreign companies and thereby harm the U.S. economy.

Chinese Manual Docking Successful; Chinese Human Spaceflight Budget Revealed

Chinese Manual Docking Successful; Chinese Human Spaceflight Budget Revealed

Three Chinese astronauts in the Shenzhou-9 spacecraft successfully accomplished a manual docking with the Tiangong-1 space station.  This is the first manual docking of a Chinese crew with a space station; the first docking, on Monday, was accomplished in automated mode.   China also revealed how much the Shenzhou program has cost overall.

Liu Wang was at the controls as Shenzhou-9 undocked from Tiangong-1, moved 140 meters away, and then redocked.  China’s English-language CCTV has video of the operation.  The crew undocked from Tiangong-1 and about an hour and a half later, at 12:42 pm Beijing time (12:42 am Eastern Daylight Time), began the manual docking.  It  took 7 minutes, “3 minutes faster than the automated system” according to China’s Xinhua news service (in English).

The crew will now re-occupy Tiangong-1 and remain until Friday, when they will return to Earth.   The mission is commanded by Jing Haipeng.  The third crewmember is Liu Yang, China’s first woman astronaut, who is in charge of the medical and biological scientific experiments.

Xinhua quoted Wu Ping, a spokeswoman for China’s human spaceflight program, as saying that China’s budget for the rendezvous and docking missions Shenzhou-7 through Shenzhou-10 is “19 billion yuan (3 billion U.S. dollars)” and China spent “another 20 billion yuan on manned space missions carried out by Shenzhou-6 and previous spaceships” since the human spaceflight program began in 1992.  It is not clear is the 19 billion yuan includes the Tiangong-1 module.

Shenzhou 1 through Shenzhou 4 were automated tests that did not carry crews.  Shenzhou-5, in 2003, was China’s first human spaceflight, with one crew member.  Shenzhou-6 carried two crew members in 2005.  Shenzhou-7 in 2008 carried three crew, one of whom performed a short spacewalk.  Shenzhou-8 was an automated rendezvous and docking test with the Tiangong-1 module — no crew was aboard either craft.  Shenzhou-9 is the mission now underway.  Shenzhou-10 is planned for next year, probably with another three-person crew.

China plans to build a larger, 60-metric-ton, space station later in the decade.   Tiangong-1 is only 8.6 metric tons.  By comparison, the International Space Station is 400 metric tons.