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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Russian Satellite Launch Fizzles
2006-03-02
Russia's space program suffered another embarrassing failure Wednesday, when a booster rocket failed to put an Arab commercial satellite to a designated orbit, officials said.

The Arabsat 4A telecommunications satellite owned by the Saudi ARABSAT company was launched from the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. It was atop a rocket equipped with an additional booster stage, the Russian Federal Space Agency said in a statement.

The rocket successfully delivered the satellite to a preliminary orbit, but the booster failed to function properly and could not deliver the satellite to a designated orbit, the agency said.

An emergency panel of space officials was investigating the situation, it said. Federal Space Agency spokesman Vyacheslav Davidenko told The Associated Press that experts from the European Astrium company that had built the satellite were trying to save it by guiding it to a proper orbit using the vehicle own orientation engines.

"Chances for success are slim," Davidenko said.

Davidenko said the satellite separated from the booster earlier than required and remained in an orbit much lower than the designated one.

The bungled launch was the latest in a series of mishaps that have recently plagued Russia's space program, jeopardizing its hopes to earn more revenue from commercial launches of foreign satellites.

In October, a high-profile European satellite was lost because of a Russian booster failure. The loss of the $142 million CryoSat satellite dealt a major blow to the European Space Agency, which had hoped to conduct a three-year mapping of polar ice caps and provide more reliable data for the study of global warming.

Also that month, space experts failed to recover an experimental space vehicle after its return, engineers lost contact with an earlier launched Russian Earth-monitoring satellite and a new optical research satellite was lost due to a booster failure.

Following the failed launches, Russia's President Vladimir Putin fired the chief of the Khrunichev company that built the Rokot booster. The rocket that failed Wednesday was also built by Khrunichev.
Posted by:.com

#11  Allan says images are forbidden, specially for muslims ;-b. Allan knows best.
Posted by: Hupomoger Clans9827   2006-03-02 19:17  

#10  Close examination of the Soviet space program reveals a history of excellent designs discarded due to political or nepotistic preferences.

Sidebar: Poor Soviet vehicle reliability combined with low grade telemetry and video monitoring made it common practice to have all of the design crew and engineers present at liftoffs to observe post-launch behavior in case failure analysis proved necessary.

The crushing crowning moment happened in 1960. A massive military application solid-fuel booster had not ignited properly. Per SOP, all crews waited for nearly an hour in case the chemical engine suddenly sparked to life. (Much like a Roman candle that suddenly ignites due to a smouldering fuse.) With the waiting period over, primary designer Korolev and some 200 other design bureau members strode across the launch pad and approached the immobile rocket only to have it catastrophically detonate all at once.

Soviet Russia lost the cream of its aerospace engineering task force in a single incandescent second. This is probably why the Soviets were unable to detect subtle but critical parameters included as disinformation in the US space shuttle plans they stole during the early 1980s. All of this added up to a space program riddled by self-defeating special interests and interagency squabbling. It's hard to imagine that things have changed much today.
Posted by: Zenster   2006-03-02 18:18  

#9  Insh'Allah!!!
Posted by: borgboy   2006-03-02 17:51  

#8  Is this what they call the blind leading the blind?
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2006-03-02 16:51  

#7  HOLDD ... I like it. ;-)
Posted by: lotp   2006-03-02 16:47  

#6  Halliburton Orbital Lift Destabilization Division™?
Posted by: Chinter Flarong9283   2006-03-02 16:46  

#5  Here's another Halliburton division needs naming.
Posted by: Grunter   2006-03-02 13:24  

#4  Of course the ideal orbit for an Arab satellite is the launch point to Tel Aviv. From their view point anyway.
Posted by: Cheaderhead   2006-03-02 10:18  

#3  Why do I find this as good news?
Posted by: 49 Pan   2006-03-02 09:59  

#2  Was this the geosync TV broadcast bird intended to block exposing the basin to reality?
Posted by: Skidmark   2006-03-02 05:36  

#1  Ha-ha!
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2006-03-02 05:29  

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