[sci.space] space news from Nov 20 AW&ST

henry@utzoo.uucp (Henry Spencer) (01/04/90)

Soviets study launching a probe for a close flyby of the Sun, using an
Energia launch to avoid the need for a Jupiter gravity assist.

Picture of the first Pegasus captive flight Nov 9.  The flight went
fairly well, with minor communications problems plus some flaking of
thermal-protection paint.  Loads were within acceptable levels at
all speeds up to Mach 0.84, higher than will be needed for launches.

First flight of Japan's H-2 slips from 1992 to 1993 after serious
development problems with the LE-7 oxyhydrogen engine.  A test-stand
fire in September may cause a further slip.

Glavcosmos signs first US commercial launch customer.  Energetics Satellite
Corp. has signed up for up to $54M worth of small secondary payloads on
Protons, as a cheap way of launching its small-satellite navsat system.
[I don't recognize Energetics, although it might be what used to be known
as Starfind.]  US government approvals remain a worrisome issue, although
Energetics believes it is in a strong position:  its satellites are mostly
inflatable antenna arrays, "hardly different from an old Echo satellite",
so there is minimal new technology.  If, as many suspect, the US embargo
on use of Soviet launches is really a buy-American policy in disguise,
Energetics is prepared to move its manufacturing out of the US.

Glavcosmos is talking to Australia and Brazil about building foreign
launch sites for its boosters.

Payload Systems Inc, which is already flying small payloads on Soviet manned
missions, says recent upheavals in the Soviet Union may have eased life
in some ways, but they have also introduced uncertainties about future
policies and about who is in charge.  However, PSI says its existing
agreements still look solid, and it is very happy about a clause in the
agreements which says that any flight which takes the payload environment
outside certain tight limits is free.  "This is exactly what we're having
trouble doing with NASA."

Soviets seek French instruments for their Almaz heavy recon/resources
platforms.  Cosmos 1870, which ended operations in July, was the first
Almaz.  Another is scheduled for launch in 1990, and a third in 1993.
The third will be officially operational, the other two for development.
Almaz is 18.5 tons at launch, with 4 tons of instruments.  The basic
platform is 7m x 4.15m, with a 100-cubic-meter pressurized payload
compartment.  Available power is 2.5kW from solar arrays.  The Soviets
have admitted [as many suspected] that Almaz was developed with an eye
on military reconnaissance.  France is interested in Almaz, but thinks
the 1990 and 1993 ones are too soon for major French participation.

NASA is giving its Commercial Development of Space centers more freedom
in purchasing hardware and services.  The result is that many of the
centers are now talking openly about wanting an unmanned free-flying
platform operational before the space station, and are voicing serious
uncertainty about how suitable the station will be for microgravity work.

Galileo makes first course correction, using over 5500 thruster firings
spread over three days.  (The multiple [!] firings are partly because
of concerns about possible thruster overheating, and partly because the
thrusters are on the spinning section and have to be fired in bursts
anyway.)  Galileo is generally in good health.  There are performance
problems with the gyroscopes, and the scheme for moving the RTG booms
to adjust the center of mass has not worked as well as expected, but
overall the ground crew is quite happy.

Discovery launch slips while NASA assesses electronics problems in the
SRBs.  An electronics assembly shorted out in a bench test, and when
another one from inventory was tested, it failed too... so NASA wants
inspections of all units from the same production batch, including
the two that are in Discovery's SRBs.  There was also some concern about
a small hydrazine leak in the right SRB's hydraulic power unit.

Hughes Electron Devices confirms that its travelling-wave-tube amplifiers
have a design defect affecting long-term reliability, and that this has
caused a slip in the launch of Japan's Superbird B.  A fix has been
devised, although more tests will be needed to confirm that it works.
At least one Eutelsat [European] and Anik [Canadian] comsat awaiting
launch are also affected.
-- 
1972: Saturn V #15 flight-ready|     Henry Spencer at U of Toronto Zoology
1990: birds nesting in engines | uunet!attcan!utzoo!henry henry@zoo.toronto.edu