Jonathan's Space Report No. 673 2013 Jan 29 Somerville, MA USA -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- International Space Station ---------------------------- Expedition 34 is underway with commander Kevin Ford and flight engineers FE-1 Oleg Novitskiy, FE-2 Yevgeniy Tarelkin, FE-4 Roman Romanenko, FE-5 Chris Hadfield, and FE-6 Tom Marshburn. Ferry ship Soyuz TMA-06M is docked at the Poisk module; Soyuz TMA-07M is at Rassvet; cargo ship Progress M-16M is at the Pirs module and Progress M-17M is at the Zvezda aft port. On Jan 16-24, the Dextre SPDM robot `hand' was used with the Robotic Refuelling Mission hardware on the ELC-4 platform to demonstrate remotely controlled refuelling of a simulated satellite. Erratum -------- The Pleiades launch was on Dec 2, not Dec 1. Rokot launch ------------ The first orbital launch on 2013, on Jan 15, was a Rokot from Plesetsk carrying three Rodnik-S (Strela-3M) communications satellites for the Russian Ministry of Defense into a 1480 x 1500 km x 82.5 deg orbit. They were given the cover names Kosmos-2482 to 2484. In this type of mission the Briz-KM upper stage usually makes a depletion burn to lower perigee to around 1200 km, but the extra burn failed to take place this time. Japanese IGS launch ------------------ H-2A rocket F22 was launched from Tanegashima on Jan 27 carrying two intelligence payloads in the 'Joho Shushu Eisei' (Information Gathering Satellite) series. The top payload is 'JSE Reda 4-goki' (IGS Radar No. 4) carrying a synthetic aperture radar payload. The lower payload is 'Jissho eisei' (Demo Satellite), believed to be an optical imaging payload. The satellites are in 508 x 513 km x 97.5 deg and 512 x 522 km x 97.5 deg orbits. Resurs-OE reentry ----------------- Resurs-OE No. 3-2, a Soviet remote sensing satellite codenamed Kosmos-1484, reentered on Jan 28 sometime around 0230 UTC over the eastern United States. The satellite was launched in 1983 and ended operations in 1984; in 1993 it partially disintegrated (probably a battery explosion?) generating 48 pieces of cataloged space debris. Historical Essay: GAMBIT 4352 ------------------------------ The NRO has declassified details of NRO's GAMBIT-3 mission 4352, launched on 1982 Jan 21 and deorbited 1982 May 23. The analysis in this essay is based on comparison of the newly declassified documents with existing information on the mission and on the GAMBIT program. This 52nd GAMBIT-3 flight was the only 'Dual Mode' GAMBIT mission, with both high and low orbit (search and surveillance) mission phases. Previous GAMBIT flights used only low orbits. The mission observed Soviet and Chinese military targets as well as assessing their agricultural output; I will leave others to discuss details of the intelligence mission and broader programmatic issues (for example, see Dwayne Day's article http://www.thespacereview.com/article/2218/1 ) and here focus on the orbital history of the vehicle. British Interplanetary Society analyst Tony Kenden spotted the mission as unusual and wrote an article about it later that year (JBIS 35, 441), basing his analysis on two-line element (TLE) data which at that point were publicly available even for NRO satellites. (That changed a few months after Anthony's article came out, possibly not coincidentally). However it now turns out that the TLE data for the later part of the mission is bogus, which prevented analysts from understanding the full story until now. The 4500 kg Mission 4352 spacecraft was launched by Titan 34B Agena D from Space Launch Complex 4-West at Vandenberg AFB at 1930 UTC on 1982 Jan 21 and reached a 147 x 543 km x 97.3 deg sun-synchronous orbit ten minutes later. It was cataloged as object 1982-06A. Another object, 1982-06B, reentered quickly - it was probably a camera aperture cover. At around 0500 UTC on Jan 22, the Gambit orbit was boosted slightly to 189 x 563 km; a series of three burns the next day boosted it to a 571 x 659 km orbit - unprecedented for the normally atmosphere-surfing Gambit series - and it began its high orbit mission. Orbit maintenance burns were performed once a week, slowly raising the orbit to 636 x 672 km by Mar 9 and then lowering it to 616 x 630 km by Apr 22. The Gambit-3 consists of an Agena stage connected via a rotating joint to the PPS (Photographic Payload Section), which in turn is connected to a fairing containing two SRVs (Satellite Recovery Vehicles). Each SRV consists of a capsule with a film container, a heat shield, a thermal cover, and a `thrust cone' with a solid rocket to deorbit the system for mid-air recovery over the Pacific. On Mar 20 SRV-1, now full of film, was commanded to eject from the nose of Gambit 4352 in its 633 x 666 km orbit. But the pyro failed to fire and a backup timer separated the capsule from the thrust cone. The capsule, heat shield and thermal cover were stranded circling the Earth in high orbit, while the thrust cone remained attached to the spacecraft fairing. The objects were cataloged as 1982-06C (possibly the heat shield; reentered 1999 Feb), 1982-06D (possibly the thermal cover; reentered 1998 Sep per estimate by Ted Molczan in http://www.satobs.org/seesat/Jan-2013/0059.html) and 1982-06E (the SRV-1 film capsule, reentered 2002 Sep 28). All the film from the first part of the mission was lost, and it was decided to continue high orbit operations a little longer than had originally been planned. On around Apr 27 the spacecraft fairing, with SRV-1's thrust cone attached, was ejected from the spacecraft. It was cataloged as 1982-06F and per Ted Molczan's estimate may have reentered in about 1995 Apr. Then, on 1982 Apr 28-29, Gambit 4352 made a series of five burns to lower its orbital perigee to only 155 km. Two more burns on Apr 29-30 lowered apogee to 343 km and low orbit operations began; a final burn on May 3 set the orbit at 152 x 308 km. These orbit changes are NOT reflected in the published NORAD tracking data, which shows the satellite remaining in a 633 x 645 km orbit until the end of the flight. My first assumption was that this discrepancy was an inadvertent error, with NORAD tracking the wrong object and not communicating with NRO, rather than deliberate disinformation (which would be out of character for that era). However, it is a bit mysterious - did NORAD really fail to spot a 5 ton satellite in very low polar orbit for almost a whole month? Isn't that the sort of thing they were set up to spot in the first place? Daily reboosts from May 3 to May 20 maintained the low orbit, and at around 1700 UTC on May 20 the photographic mission was concluded and attempts to recover SRV-2 began. Since it was thought to have the same pyro problem, the only way to get it down was to deorbit the entire spacecraft and then separate the capsule during descent. The Agena main engine was to be used for the deboost, but when the propellant valves were opened the spacecraft oscillated out of control. That plan was abandoned in favor of using the Agena's integrated secondary propulsion system (ISPS) for the deboost. On May 22, with control recovered, the orbit was only about 140 x 250 km, and four more reboosts put the perigee back up to 160 km to keep the spacecraft in orbit for another day. Finally at around 2225 UTC on May 23 the ISPS fired to send the spacecraft into the atmosphere, and the SRV-2 capsule was successfully recovered in mid-air over the Pacific at 2246 UTC on 1982 May 23, completing the unusual mission. Deep Space Missions -------------------- Here is a list of current deep space missions that I believe to be still operating, with barycentric locations as of 2013 Jan 27 - let me know what I have missed. I've also included a few defunct probes of interest. I don't have accurate current orbital data for Pioneer 6 and 8. Note that Voyager 1 is the most distant probe from the Sun (and Earth), but Pioneer 10 is the one that is farthest out in the ecliptic plane. I'm playing with the science-fiction trope of `sectors' as a way of describing solar system geography - so I include a sector made up of zones in ecliptic plane radius (where the boundaries are determined by which of the two closest major planets has the dominant gravitational perturbation, with a few exceptions) and directions labelled by the "barycentric constellation" - the constellation the spacecraft would appear to be in if you were sitting at the solar system barycenter. Don't take these too seriously, but I find having a coarse binning like this helps give a better sense of where the different probes than the raw numbers. The more conventional 'Geo Con' column gives the constellation the probe is in when seen from Earth's center, Spacecraft Radial Status Radial Dist Dist above ----- Sector ---- Dist in Ecliptic Ecliptic Zone BaryCon GeoCon ============ Outer System ========================== Voyager 1 123.1 AU Exploring heliopause 100.9 AU 35.0 AU Transneptunian Oph Oph Pioneer 10 107.6 Defunct 107.5 5.6 Transneptunian Tau Tau Voyager 2 100.7 Exploring heliopause 83.1 -34.4 Transneptunian Tel Tel Pioneer 11 85.8 Defunct 83.2 21.1 Transneptunian Sct Sct New Horizons 25.3 En route Pluto 25.3 0.0 Cisneptunian Sgr Sgr Cassini 9.8 In Saturn orbit 9.8 0.0 Saturn Vir Lib Rosetta 5.2 En route Comet C-G 5.2 -0.3 Parajovian Sco Oph Dawn 2.54 En route (1) Ceres 2.5 -0.1 Main Belt Ori Tau ============ Mid System ========================== Juno 2.00 En route Earth flyby 2.0 0.0 Transmartian Vir Vir Stardust 1.71 Defunct 1.7 0.1 Transmartian Cap Aqr Mars Odyssey 1.38 In Mars orbit Mars Aqr Cap Mars Express 1.38 In Mars orbit Mars Aqr Cap Mars Recon Orb 1.38 In Mars orbit Mars Aqr Cap Opportunity 1.38 Mars surface Mars Aqr Cap Curiosity 1.38 Mars surface Mars Aqr Cap Pioneer 8 1.08? Dormant 1.1 0.0 Trans-Earth Vir? Oph? Stereo B 1.07 Observatory 1.1 0.0 Trans-Earth Aqr Aqr Chang'e-2 1.03 Dormant? 1.0 0.0 Near-Earth Cnc Ari Deep Impact 1.02 En route (163249) 1.0 -0.1 Near-Earth Psc Aqr Spitzer 1.01 Observatory 1.0 0.0 Near-Earth Tau Psc ICE 0.98 Dormant 1.0 0.0 Near-Earth ? ? Kepler 0.97 Observatory 1.0 0.0 Near-Earth Gem Psc Stereo A 0.96 Observatory 1.0 0.0 Near-Earth Oph Sgr Pioneer 6 0.94? Dormant 0.9 0.0 Sub-Earth Cnc? Oph? ============ Earth-Moon System ========================== ARTEMIS P1 0.98 Lunar orbit ARTEMIS P2 0.98 Lunar orbit LRO 0.98 Lunar orbit Wind 0.98 At Earth-Sun L1 SOHO 0.98 At Earth-Sun L1 ACE 0.98 At Earth-Sun L1 Herschel 0.98 At Earth-Sun L2 Planck 0.98 At Earth-Sun L2 ============ Inner System ========================== Venus Express 0.73 In Venus orbit 0.7 0.0 Venus Sgr Sgr Akatsuki 0.65 En route Venus 0.7 0.0 Transvenusian Psc Aqr Ikaros 0.65? Dormant 0.7 0.0 Transvenusian Psc Aqr Messenger 0.40 In Mercury orbit 0.4 0.0 Mercury Aqr Cap In Deep Earth orbit: Geotail, Chandra, XMM, Cluster FM5/FM6/FM7/FM8, Integral, IBEX, Spektr-R Table of Recent (orbital) Launches ---------------------------------- Date UT Name Launch Vehicle Site Mission INTL. DES. Dec 2 0202 Pleiades 1B Soyuz ST-A/Fregat Kourou ELS Imaging 68A Dec 3 2044 Eutelsat 70B Zenit-3SL SL Odyssey Comms 69A Dec 8 1313 Yamal 402 Proton-M/Briz-M Baykonur LC39/200 Comms 70A Dec 11 1803 X-37B OTV-3 Atlas V 501 Canaveral SLC41 Spaceplane 71A Dec 12 0049 Kwangmyongsong-3 F2 Unha-3 Sohae Test 72A Dec 18 1612 Gokturk 2 Chang Zheng 2D Jiuquan Imaging 73A Dec 19 1212 Soyuz TMA-07M Soyuz-FG Baykonur LC1 Spaceship 74A Dec 19 2149 Skynet 5D ) Ariane 5ECA Kourou ELA3 Comms 75A Mexsat-Bicentenario) Comms 75B Jan 15 1625 Kosmos-2482 ) Rokot Plesetsk LC133/3 Comms 01A Kosmos-2483 ) Comms 01B Kosmos-2484 ) Comms 01C Jan 27 0440 JSE Reda-4 ) H-2A 202 Tanegashima Radar 02A Jissho eisei ) Imaging 02B Suborbital flights ------------------- Iran reports that it launched a suborbital mission carrying a monkey in late January, in preparation for future human spaceflights. The Pishgam (`Pioneer') rocket seems to be basically the same as the Kavoshgar sounding rocket launched previously. The launch was announced Jan 28, but it is not 100 percent clear whether the flight was that morning or at an earlier date, with the original Farsi news stories saying only that it was done at the time of Prophet's birthday (actually Jan 29 in Iran, definitely after the flight) - previous rocket launches have sometimes been announced weeks after the fact. The rocketing rhesus (macaca mulatta) was recovered in good condition. The US, India and China carried out missile tests on Jan 26-27. The US Missile Defense Agency's GM CTV-01 carried the CE-II EKV interceptor kill vehicle on a flight to test fixes to the problems which caused previous failures; no target was launched. The BO-5 missile was launched by India from under the sea - probably from a container on a submerged pontoon at the Visakhapatnam test site, although some news reports claimed it was launched from the INS Arihant submarine. The BO-5 is thought to be the same missile as the K-15 launched since 2008, but there's also reportedly a K-5 missile whose status is unclear. The Chinese test involved interception of a target missile, apparently repeating a Jan 2010 exercise. Table of Recent (suborbital) Launches ---------------------------------- Date UT Payload/Flt Name Launch Vehicle Site Mission Apogee/km Dec 8 2100 AEB VS30/O V10 VS-30/Orion Alcantara Ionosphere 428 Dec 13 0520 NASA 36.283UH Black Brant IX White Sands XR Astron 257? Dec 17 0700 S-520-28 S-520 Uchinoura Micrograv 312 Dec 20 0351 Prithvi RV Prithvi II Chandipur IC3 Op Test 100? Jan 26 2200 EKV CTV-01 GBI Vandenberg LF23 Test flight 1000? Jan 27 0810 RV BO-5 Visakhapatnam? Test flight 300? Jan 27 1210? Target RV DF-21? Jiuquan? Target 200? Jan 27 1210? Interceptor DF-21? Urumqi? ABM Test 100? Jan 28? Pishgam Pishgam? Semnan? Life Sci 120 .-------------------------------------------------------------------------. | Jonathan McDowell | phone : (617) 495-7176 | | Somerville MA 02143 | inter : planet4589 at gmail | | USA | jcm@cfa.harvard.edu | | | | JSR: http://www.planet4589.org/jsr.html | | Back issues: http://www.planet4589.org/space/jsr/back | | Subscribe/unsub: http://www.planet4589.org/mailman/listinfo/jsr | '-------------------------------------------------------------------------'