[sci.space] space news from Dec 12 AW&ST

henry@utzoo.uucp (Henry Spencer) (02/16/89)

[Okay, so I'm a bit behind.  To quote from a thoroughly obscure publication
that's got an even worse case of the lates...

	"Please send all complaints regarding our publishing schedule to:
		The Shitcan
		PO Box 2001
		Everytown USA"

Between absences and illness, it's been a busy winter.]

The cover is an excellent color photograph of a spacesuit with a
maneuvering unit attached.  The markings on the sleeve say CCCP.

Japanese construction company buys 15% share in the Cape York Space
Agency (a private firm despite the name).

Hercules finishes first of its filament-wound Titan 4 SRBs.

Japan will probably put manned spaceflight on hold for a few years due
to the budget impact of existing programs like the H-2.

Fuss over possible impropriety in ASRM bidding, part of one proposal has
gone missing.  Investigation underway, schedule not expected to slip.

NASA drops plans for a second Solar Max repair mission:  NASA management
has decided that the shuttle manifest is too full in the near future
(Solar Max will reenter in 1990-91 if not reboosted) and the $28M cost
is too high.

Postmortem on the Atlantis mission.  The payload's solar arrays initially
refused to deploy, although the problem was cleared up quickly.  Tiles on
Atlantis's belly were inspected with the Canadarm's cameras due to concern
about possible tile damage; some damage but nothing disastrous.  Debris
that damaged the tiles does not seem to have come from the SRBs, with
speculation focusing on the external tank, which was nearly five years
old -- the oldest yet flown.

There is some concern about emergency aborts from high-inclination launches
like that of STS-27.  A multiple-engine-failure abort could have dumped
the external tank into Eastern Europe or the USSR.

Oops:  technician stumbles and damages first-stage exhaust nozzle of the
IUS meant for Discovery's next launch.  A replacement first-stage motor
has been pulled from USAF inventory, and schedule is not expected to slip.

Magellan launch still on schedule for late April despite electronics
problems.  An elastomer compound used for mounting electronic components
turns out to expand when heated or exposed to some cleaning solvents,
and this has cracked solder joints.  The fix is to eliminate the elastomer
and mount the components directly on the boards, but this and the cleaning
necessary after the battery fire have eaten up most of the safety margin
in the schedule.  The launch window is April 28 through May 23, with the
next window in May 1991.

French/Soviet Mir mission encounters minor problems due to crowding -- six
men in Mir is cramped.  Chretien complains about the Physalie microgravity
physiology experiment, saying it is too complex for the time available,
and that the cosmonauts feel like lab animals.  "If there was a window
that opened on Mir, I think I'd throw Physalie out of the station."
The scientists on the ground comment that clearly such experiments want
someone with laboratory training, rather than a military pilot, aloft.

Soviets sell advertising contracts for the French/Soviet mission, to
the concern of the French.  "...we are against our cosmonaut looking
like a race car driver."

Glavcosmos may compete against Soyuzkarta in commercial sales of
earth-resources data.  Soyuzkarta sells images only in film form, and
Glavcosmos has responsibility for several satellites that could return
images as digital data, the form preferred by most Western customers.

Details on the autolanding system used by Buran, basically a multiple
distance-measuring system (similar to the US military Tacan) for the
approach and a microwave scanning-beam system (similar to the new MLS
system starting to enter service for international civil aviation)
for the landing.

There appears to be concern in some quarters within the Soviet space
program that too much international cooperation might dilute the USSR's
own capabilities.

Soviets and US talk about Mars missions.  Soviets propose adding surface
meteorological packages to Mars Observer; US thinks this too costly.
US proposes adding a mapping spectrometer (bumped from Mars Observer)
to one of the Soviet 1994 Mars orbiters; Soviets will explore the idea.
The Soviet 1994 mission will be launched by Proton, as there isn't
enough time left to put together an Energia-scale payload.

ESA decides that the Titan-probe part of Cassini will be its next major
science mission.  [This may be a mistake, since it relies on the US
funding the orbiter part.]

Soviets say the pace of their program will be determined by mission
needs and their ability to master the technology.  "We have time on our
side... We don't face deadline pressure in having to develop one element
or another... if the first flight of Buran had failed, it would have been
a setback but it would not have meant that our manned space program came
to a halt..."

Soviets will build at least three shuttle orbiters; three is considered
enough for the "initial phase of operations".  They are very pleased with
Buran's precise automatic landing in a significant crosswind.  A second
flight will not be decided on until tile damage is assessed; so far it
looks minor.

The Soviet orbiters are not capable of docking with Mir, but Mir's
successor is planned to remedy this.  Docking mechanisms are under study.
Mir, with expansion modules, will be in service for some time, so there
is no pressure on the engineers to freeze the next one's configuration
quickly.  The first major Mir expansion module will launch in April; it
will contain more gyros, an electrolytic oxygen system, a lavatory and
shower, and a large airlock with MMUs.  The MMU is vaguely similar to
the US one overall, but different in detail.  It will be used with an
improved EVA suit.

Soviets unveil An-225 Mria, a stretched (in both directions -- fuselage
stretch and longer wings with one more engine on each side) An-124
Ruslan.  It will be by far the world's biggest transport aircraft, and
one major mission for it is hauling Energia components.  It has mounting
points for external payloads on top, and twin vertical tails for stability
while carrying large external loads.

Picture of the Kaliningrad space operations center's shuttle control room.
-- 
The Earth is our mother;       |     Henry Spencer at U of Toronto Zoology
our nine months are up.        | uunet!attcan!utzoo!henry henry@zoo.toronto.edu