Autor Wątek: Starty rakiet (IV kwartał 2018 roku)  (Przeczytany 99784 razy)

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Offline kanarkusmaximus

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Odp: Starty rakiet (IV kwartał 2018 roku)
« Odpowiedź #60 dnia: Października 28, 2018, 01:26 »
Proszę o korektę, ale Sojuz-FG i teraz Zhuque-1 to dwa pierwsze nieudane starty rakiet orbitalnych w 2018 roku? Wcześniej tylko "coś" nie wyszło z satelitami, ale nie z rakietami nośnymi?

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Odp: Starty rakiet (IV kwartał 2018 roku)
« Odpowiedź #61 dnia: Października 28, 2018, 06:10 »
Proszę o korektę, ale Sojuz-FG i teraz Zhuque-1 to dwa pierwsze nieudane starty rakiet orbitalnych w 2018 roku? Wcześniej tylko "coś" nie wyszło z satelitami, ale nie z rakietami nośnymi?

Tak jest.
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Offline Orionid

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Odp: Starty rakiet (IV kwartał 2018 roku)
« Odpowiedź #62 dnia: Października 28, 2018, 07:07 »
Wcześniejszy miesiąc z nieudanym startem to listopad, czyli była to swego rodzaju 10-miesięczna cisza przed burzą.

Offline kanarkusmaximus

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Odp: Starty rakiet (IV kwartał 2018 roku)
« Odpowiedź #63 dnia: Października 28, 2018, 10:43 »
Ciekawe, czy coś się jeszcze nie uda do końcu roku. Złośliwie napiszę, że Proton ma polecieć. ;)

Polskie Forum Astronautyczne

Odp: Starty rakiet (IV kwartał 2018 roku)
« Odpowiedź #63 dnia: Października 28, 2018, 10:43 »

Offline ah

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« Ostatnia zmiana: Października 29, 2018, 11:24 wysłana przez ah »

Offline kanarkusmaximus

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Odp: Starty rakiet (IV kwartał 2018 roku)
« Odpowiedź #65 dnia: Października 29, 2018, 17:43 »
Czy dziś doszło do dwóch czy tylko jednego startu?

Offline mss

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Odp: Starty rakiet (IV kwartał 2018 roku)
« Odpowiedź #66 dnia: Października 29, 2018, 17:58 »
"Mathematics is the language in which God has written the universe." - Galileo Galilei (1564 - 1642)

Offline JSz

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Odp: Starty rakiet (IV kwartał 2018 roku)
« Odpowiedź #67 dnia: Października 29, 2018, 19:15 »
Zdaje się, że był 30 udany chiński start w tym roku!

Offline kanarkusmaximus

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Odp: Starty rakiet (IV kwartał 2018 roku)
« Odpowiedź #68 dnia: Października 29, 2018, 20:44 »
Zdaje się, że był 30 udany chiński start w tym roku!

I jeszcze wciąż do wystrzelenia ładna seria rakiet do końca roku! :)

Offline astropl

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Odp: Starty rakiet (IV kwartał 2018 roku)
« Odpowiedź #69 dnia: Października 29, 2018, 21:47 »

PAŹDZIERNIK 2018

08    02:21:28          Vandenberg 4E     Falcon-9R           SAOCOM-1A
09    02:43:04          Jiuquan 43/94     CZ-2C/YZ-1S         Yaogan-32 Grupa 1 A, B
11    08:40:15          Bajkonur 1/5      Sojuz-FG            Sojuz MS-10
15    04:23:04          Xichang           CZ-3B/YZ-1          Beidou-3 M15, M16
17    04:15:00          Canaveral 41      Atlas-5/551         AEHF-4
20    01:45:35          Kourou 3          Ariane-5ECA         BepiColombo
24    22:57             Taiyuan 9         CZ-4B               Haiyang-2B
25    00:15             Plesieck 43/4     Sojuz-2.1b          Kosmos 2528 (Lotos-S1 No.3)
27    08:00             Jiuquan           Zhuque-1            Weilai-1
29    00:43:13          Jiuquan 43/94     CZ-2C               CFOSAT,  Zhaojin-1, Tiange-1, Xiaoxiang-1 (02),
                                                              Tianfuguoxing-1, Changshagaoxin, Hongyan-1,
                                                              CubeBel-1
29    04:08:01          Tanegashima Y/1   H-2A/202            Ibuki-2 (GOSAT-2), KhalifaSat, DIWATA-2B,
                                                              PROITERES-2, Tenkou, Stars-AO, AUTcube2
__________________________________________________________________________________________
~31   08:05-09:30       Canaveral 13/31   L-1011/Pegasus-XL   ICON

LISTOPAD 2018

01    ??:??             Xichang           CZ-3B/G2            Beidou-3 G1Q
03    ??:??             Plesieck 43/4     Sojuz-2.1/Fregat-M  Kosmos (Uragan-M)
07    00:47:51          Kourou ELS        Sojuz-STB/Fregat-MT MetOp-C
0?    00:30-04:30       Onenui 1          Electron/Curie      Outernet 1, CICERO, Lemur-2 x 2, IRVINE01,
                                                              NABEO
14    ??:??             KSC 39A           Falcon-9R           Es'hail 2
15    09:49             Wallops 0A        Antares-230         Cygnus-10
17    ??:??             Mojave 12/30      B-747/LauncherOne   balast, ? x cubesatów
18    ??:??             Bajkonur 31/6     Sojuz-FG            Progress MS-10
19    18:32             Vandenberg 4E     Falcon-9R           Spaceflight SSO-A/SHERPA SSO (kilkadziesiąt
                                                              cubesatów, w tym PW-Sat-2)
1?    ??:??             Xichang           CZ-3B/YZ-1          Beidou-3 M17, M18
20    ??:??             Kourou Z          Vega                Mohammed VI-B
22    ??:??             Sriharikota       PSLV-CA             HySIS, ? x 30
25    ??:??             Jiuquan           KZ-1A               Jilin-1 09
29    ??:??             Vandenberg 6      Delta-4H            NRO L-71 (Imp. Crystal Block 5 #1)
??    ??:??             Jiuquan 43/94     CZ-2D?              Jiading-1
??    ??:??             Jiuquan 43/94     CZ-2D?              SaudiSAT-5A, SaudiSAT-5B
??    ??:??             Jiuquan LA4       CZ-11               Lingque x 2
??    ??:??             Sriharikota S     GSLV Mk3            GSat-29
??    ??:??             Plesieck 133/3    Rokot/Briz-KM       Kosmos x 3 (Rodnik-S x 3)

GRUDZIEŃ 2018

03    ??:??             Bajkonur 1/5      Sojuz-FG            Sojuz MS-11
04    21:34             Kourou 3          Ariane-5ECA         GSAT-11, GEO-KOMPSAT-2A
08    ??:??             Xichang           CZ-3B/G2            Chang'e-4
15    ??:??             Kourou 5          Ariane-5ECA         GSAT-31 lub HS4-SGS1
15    14:08-14:52       Canaveral 40      Falcon-9R           GPS-3 F1
15    ??:??             Taiyuan 9         CZ-4B               Ziyuan-2D, Tianyi MV-1, BNU-1
18    ??:??             Kourou S          Sojuz-STB/Fregat-MT CSO-1
25    ??:??             Wostocznyj 1S     Sojuz-2.1a/Fregat-M Kanopus-W No. 5, 6, [Iran], SAMSON x 3,
                                                              Flock x 12
25    22:12             Bajkonur          Proton-M/Briz-M     Kosmos (Błagowiest 3)
27    ??:??             Bajkonur 31/6     Sojuz-2.1b          EgyptSat-A
30    16:38             Vandenberg 4E     Falcon-9R           Iridium-NEXT x 10
??    ??:??             Canaveral 40      Falcon-9R           Dragon-16
??    ??:??             Onenui 1          Electron/Curie      ANDESITE, CeREs, CHOMPTT, Da Vinci, ISX,
                                                              NMTSat, RSat-P, Shields 1, STF 1, CubeSail 1,
                                                              CubeSail 2, GeoStare, TomSat Eagle Scout,
                                                              TomSat R3, SHFT 1
??    ??:??             Sriharikota       PSLV                EMIsat
??    ??:??             Kodiak 3C         Vector-R            Unicorn-2a, Alfa Orbital UG Delfi-PQ1,
                                                              TU Delft
??    ??:??             Kodiak 3C         Vector-R            Landmapper-HD
Waldemar Zwierzchlejski
http://lk.astronautilus.pl

Offline kanarkusmaximus

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Odp: Starty rakiet (IV kwartał 2018 roku)
« Odpowiedź #70 dnia: Października 29, 2018, 23:22 »
No to pozostaje nam start Pegasusa. Pewnie będzie transmitowany na NASA TV.

Offline astropl

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« Odpowiedź #71 dnia: Października 30, 2018, 07:19 »
No to pozostaje nam start Pegasusa. Pewnie będzie transmitowany na NASA TV.

Data startu ma byś ustalona dzisiaj po południu czasu wschodniego (EDT).
« Ostatnia zmiana: Października 30, 2018, 07:22 wysłana przez astropl »
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Odp: Starty rakiet (IV kwartał 2018 roku)
« Odpowiedź #72 dnia: Października 30, 2018, 08:11 »
Chińsko-francuski satelita
  29.10. o 00:43:14 z Jiuquan wystrzelona została RN CZ-2C, która wyniosła na orbitę o parametrach: hp=519 km,
ha=519 km, i=97,53° satelitę oceanograficznego CFOSAT (Chinese-French Oceanography Satellite) oraz Zhaojin-1
(Tongchuan-1), Tiange-1, Xiaoxiang-1 (02), Tianfuguoxing-1 (Xinghe), Changshagaoxin, Hongyan-1 i CubeBel-1
(BSUSat-1).
http://lk.astronautilus.pl/n181016.htm#06



Rakietowy poniedziałek (29.10.2018)
BY KRZYSZTOF KANAWKA ON 30 PAŹDZIERNIKA 2018

Dwudziestego dziewiątego października doszło do startów dwóch rakiet orbitalnych: chińskiej CZ-2C i japońskiej H-2A.

Do startu chińskiej rakiety CZ-2C doszło 29 października o godzinie 01:43 CET z kosmodromu Jiuquan. Na pokładzie tej rakiety znalazł się chińsko-francuski satelita oceanograficzny CFOSAT (Chinese-French Oceanography Satellite).

Ładunkiem drugorzędnym w tym locie był zestaw małych satelitów: Zhaojin-1, Tiange-1, Xiaoxiang-1, Tianfuguoxing-1, Changshagaoxin, Hongyan-1 i CubeBel-1. Lot przebiegł prawidłowo i CFOSAT znalazł się na orbicie o wysokości około 520 km i nachyleniu 97 stopni.
https://kosmonauta.net/2018/10/rakietowy-poniedzialek-29-10-2018/

China launches ocean-observing satellite under closer Sino-European cooperation
Source: Xinhua| 2018-10-29 18:53:51|Editor: Liangyu
 
JIUQUAN, Oct. 29 (Xinhua) -- China successfully sent an ocean-observing satellite into space on Monday, a joint mission pursued under close Sino-French space cooperation that will enable scientists to simultaneously study, for the first time, ocean surface winds and waves.

The China-France Oceanography Satellite (CFOSat), atop a Long March-2C carrier rocket, took off at 8:43 a.m. from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwest China's Gobi Desert and entered a sun-synchronous orbit 520 km above Earth.

Jointly developed by the China National Space Administration (CNSA) and the Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales (CNES), France's space agency, the satellite will conduct 24-hour observations of global wave spectrums, effective wave height and ocean surface wind fields, said Zhao Jian, a senior official with CNSA.

INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGIES

As the first satellite-related cooperation between China and France, the CFOSat is equipped with the world's most advanced technologies.

It carries two innovative radar instruments -- a wind scatterometer developed by China to measure the strength and direction of winds and a wave spectrometer developed by France to survey the length, height and direction of waves, according to Wang Lili, chief designer of the satellite at the China Academy of Space Technology (CAST).

The two instruments will simultaneously help scientists collect data about winds and waves at the same location for the first time, Wang said.

Winds generate waves, and waves, in turn, modify the surface layer of the atmosphere above the ocean. Therefore, more and more often, meteorological and wave forecasts take into consideration modeling and predictions of both ocean surface winds and waves.

Related forecasts have been enhanced significantly in the last decade, but the prediction accuracy still needs to be improved, especially in extreme events, such as typhoons and rapidly evolving storms.

The CFOSat, complementing other existing oceanography satellites, will study the dynamics of waves and how they interact with surface winds, and deepen our understanding of their formation and physical mechanism, said Zhao Jian with CNSA.

"It will help increase the observation and prediction of catastrophic sea states, such as huge waves and tropical storms, and provide security support for offshore operations and engineering, ship navigation, fisheries and coastal management," Zhao said.

By gaining new insights into the impacts of winds and waves on the atmosphere-ocean exchanges that play a key role in the climate system, the satellite will also provide basic information for global climate change research, he added.

China has previously launched six oceanic satellites, with the first officially approved to be developed in 1997. Two other satellites, the HY-1C and the HY-2B, were also sent into space this year ahead of the CFOSat.

"There are now five China-developed oceanic satellites in orbit, each having its own strength in monitoring ocean color, dynamics or sea states. They will complement each other and form a comprehensive observation network to continuously cover the globe's oceans for various statistics and with high resolution," Zhao said.

"The data they acquire, of remarkable social and economic benefits, will play an important role in protecting ocean environments, exploiting marine resources, preventing and reducing marine disasters, as well as improving marine science research," he said.

CLOSE COOPERATION

During 13 years of development, the CFOSat has helped the two research teams from China and France understand each other better.

In 2005, the Chinese and French governments signed an agreement on jointly developing an oceanography satellite and an astronomical satellite, marking the beginning of the long mission.

"We have been keeping very close cooperation with our French fellows throughout the whole process, from project assessment and designing, to satellite development and testing. The cooperation will be further extended to in-orbit tests and data processing," said Wang Lili with the CAST.

Giving full consideration to the demands of the French side, the Chinese team has made modifications to the CAST2000 platform, where the satellite is based, so that it can accommodate new payloads. They effectively separate the two instruments, both working at Ku band within the microwave range of frequencies, to prevent them from interfering with each other. They also create new designs to guarantee 24-hour power supply with stronger thermal control.

However, above all the technical difficulties, the biggest problem that the Chinese team has ever overcome was integrating the different standards adopted by the two countries in the space industry.

"As a way out, we improve the standards for the mission so that they can meet the requirements of both sides," Wang said.

As for Patrick Castillan, project manager in charge of French payloads with the CNES, the most impressive part is how each decision is made after all the hard negotiations and compromises.

"We spent a lot of time at the beginning of the program trying to understand each other, as we have different standards, habits and cultures," Castillan said. "We have both learned a lot. The result is whenever we reach an agreement, it is a win-win option."

He stressed that the cooperation will continue in the collection and processing of the data.

There will be five ground stations to collect the data from the satellite. Three are in China and the other two, managed by France, are in Canada and Sweden.

Due to these geographical limitations, the three stations in China can only collect part of the data from the satellite in relays, while the two French stations, both within the Arctic Circle, can collect all the data without breakoff.

"Our two ground stations will transfer data to both mission centers in China and in France for further processing in less than three hours," Castillan said.

"As both sides could use the data from the two instruments, we will share our software developed for the data from the wave spectrometer with the Chinese team, and they will share with us their software for the data from the wind scatterometer," he said.
http://www.xinhuanet.com/english/2018-10/29/c_137566926.htm

China-France Oceanography Satellite launches on research mission
October 29, 2018 Stephen Clark


Artist’s concept of CFOSat in orbit. Credit: CNES

(...) Comprising a Chinese-built satellite with a part-Chinese, part-French instrument payload, CFOSat marks the most significant space collaboration between China and France in history. Chinese and French officials kicked off the project in 2007 with preliminary studies, according to a mission timeline published by CNES, the French space agency. Officials formally approved final development and launch of CFOSat in 2014.

“It was in 2014 that we decided to go ahead with the CFOSat ocean-surveying mission, a major project confirming our nations’ commitment to tackling climate change and the culmination of a unique partnership in this domain,” said Jean-Yves Le Gall, president of CNES. “CNES and CNSA have constantly combined their efforts in this area ever since. We signed a memorandum of understanding in January this year, in the presence of Presidents Emmanuel Macron and Xi Jinping, to step up this cooperation and encourage wide uptake of CFOSat data.”

Le Gall said CFOSat will contribute to the Space Climate Observatory, a broad initiative building on the 2015 Paris climate agreement aimed at pooling satellite and ground data on Earth’s environment. (...)
https://spaceflightnow.com/2018/10/29/china-france-oceanography-satellite-launches-on-international-research-mission/
https://www.forum.kosmonauta.net/index.php?topic=3294.msg123961#msg123961

https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/cfosat.htm
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/cubebel-1.htm
« Ostatnia zmiana: Września 02, 2021, 16:01 wysłana przez Orionid »

Offline Orionid

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Odp: Starty rakiet (IV kwartał 2018 roku)
« Odpowiedź #73 dnia: Października 30, 2018, 08:12 »
Start z Japonii
  29.10. o 04:08:01 z Tanegashima wystrzelona została RN H-2A (202), która wyniosła w T+15' 26" na orbitę
o parametrach: hp=613 km, ha=613 km, i=97,84° satelity GOSAT-2 (Ibuki-2), KhalifaSat, minisatelity DIWATA-2B,
Tenkou, PROITERES 2 oraz cubesaty Stars-AO (Aoi) i AUTcube2.
http://lk.astronautilus.pl/n181016.htm#07




Rakietowy poniedziałek (29.10.2018)
BY KRZYSZTOF KANAWKA ON 30 PAŹDZIERNIKA 2018

Drugi ze startów nastąpił o godzinie 05:08 CET z kosmodromu Tanegashima. Na pokładzie rakiety H-2A znalazły się satelity  GOSAT-2, KhalifaSat oraz małe satelity DIWATA-2B, Tenkou, Stars-AO (Aoi) i AUTcube2.




Start H-2A z 29 października 2018 (po 52 minucie nagrania) / Credits – JAXA

Do końca miesiąca powinien nastąpić jeszcze jeden start rakiety orbitalnej. 31 października samolot L-1011 wyniesie rakietę Pegasus-XL, która z kolei wyniesie satelitę naukowego Ionospheric Connection Explorer (ICON). Jest jednak bardzo prawdopodobne, że start tej rakiety zostanie opóźniony.

(LK, PFA)
https://kosmonauta.net/2018/10/rakietowy-poniedzialek-29-10-2018/

Japan launches satellite to study human causes of climate change
October 29, 2018 Stephen Clark


A Japanese H-2A rocket lifted off at 0408 GMT (12:08 a.m. EDT; 1:08 p.m. JST) Monday. Credit: JAXA/MHI

(...) The successful launch extended a streak of successful Japanese H-2A and H-2B rocket launches to 41 missions in a row, a record dating back to 2003. It was also Japan’s sixth orbital launch of 2018, including H-2A, H-2B, Epsilon and SS-520 rocket missions — all successful.


The Ibuki 2 satellite is prepared for launch at the Tanegashima Space Center. Credit: JAXA

The Ibuki 2 satellite is a joint project between the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, the Japanese Ministry of Environment, and the National Institute of Environmental Studies. Japanese officials conceived the climate research mission as a replacement for the Ibuki satellite, which launched in January 2009 and became the first satellite dedicated to measuring greenhouse gases from space.

Ibuki means “breath” in Japanese.

Carbon-based greenhouse gases — which act as an insulating force and can drive up Earth’s temperatures — come from both natural and industrial sources. Ibuki 2 will help scientists sort out which gases come from natural sources, and which can be attributed to human activity.

“Ibuki 2 has two objectives,” said Daiki Setouchi, a technical official from the Japanese Ministry of the Environment, the agency charged with applying Ibuki 2’s results to public policy. “One is to make advances in climate change science. The other is to promote a carbon-neutral society by contributing to climate change policy.”

Built by Mitsubishi Electric Corp., the spacecraft weighed nearly 4,000 pounds — about 1,800 kilograms — at launch, and is designed for a five-year mission, with a target for seven years of scientific observations. It hosts a thermal and near-infrared sensor for carbon observation, which includes a spectrometer and a cloud and aerosol imager.

Measurements from Ibuki 2 will track carbon dioxide, methane and carbon monoxide concentration changes over months, seasons and years, helping scientists identify patterns in variability. Compared to Ibuki’s capabilities, the new satellite introduces a new technique to measure carbon monoxide, and will be able to detect smaller quantities of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.

Ikubi 2 will be able to locate greenhouse gas sources geographically, identifying cities and industrial zones responsible for carbon pollution.

“Ibuki has been operating for nine years since launch,” said Hibiki Noda, a researcher from the Satellite Observation Center at Japan’s National Institute for Environmental Studies. “While the first satellite can observe CO2, methane and water vapor, Ibuki 2 can observe carbon monoxide.”

Noda said Ibuki 2 will address challenges in separating carbon dioxide gas emitted by natural phenomena, and molecules generated by human activity.

“To use CO2 as an example, it doesn’t only come from humans burning fossil fuels like oil and coal,” she said. “It’s also found in animals’ breath and volcanic gases from volcanoes, so it’s a natural molecule that’s not just from human activity. So CO2 comes from many places.

“During combustion, CO2 is emitted at the same time as carbon monoxide,” Noda said. “Ibuki 2’s ability to observe carbon monoxide will allow us to measure both molecules simultaneously. That means we can tell whether or not certain CO2 is from humans burning fuel.”

Before the launch of Ibuki, and the launch of NASA’s similar Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 mission in 2014, scientists relied on greenhouse gas data collected by a scattering of ground-based, airborne and ship detectors.


Artist’s illustration of the Ibuki 2 satellite in orbit. Credit: JAXA

(...)
Four other satellites were launched Monday:

Diwata 2B is a 123-pound (56-kilogram) satellite built in the Philippines by PHL Microsat, a consortium of students and engineers founded in a collaboration between the Philippines’ Department of Science and Technology, University of the Philippines Diliman, and Japan’s Hokkaido University and Tohoku University. Diwata 2B carries optical cameras and an Earth-imaging telescope, plus an amateur radio payload.

Ten-Koh is a 50-pound (23-kilogram) satellite from the Kyushu Institute of Technology in Japan. Ten-Koh will collect data on the environment of low Earth orbit, and chart the degradation of advanced spacecraft materials during its mission. The satellite will measure radiation, magnetic flux density and electron density for a mission lasting at least six months.

AUTcube 2 is a 3.5-pound (1.6-kilogram) 1U CubeSat developed at the Aichi Institute of Technology in Japan. The multipurpose CubeSat will test optical communication technologies, virtual reality imaging cameras, conduct electromagnetic interference experiments, and test techniques for future deep space communications capabilities.

STARS-AO, a 3-pound (1.4-kilogram) 1U CubeSat developed at Shizuoka University in Japan, will demonstrate astronomical observations using an ultra-sensitive miniature telescope.

https://spaceflightnow.com/2018/10/29/japan-launches-satellite-to-study-human-causes-of-climate-change/
https://spaceflightnow.com/2018/10/28/h-2a-f40-mission-status-center/

http://global.jaxa.jp/press/2018/10/20181030_gosat2.html

https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/gosat-2.htm
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/dubaisat-3.htm
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/diwata-2.htm
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/proiteres-2.htm
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/ten-koh.htm
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/autcube-2.htm
https://space.skyrocket.de/doc_sdat/stars-ao.htm
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« Odpowiedź #74 dnia: Października 30, 2018, 08:57 »
Pegasus rocket launch postponed
October 23, 2018 Stephen Clark


In this Oct. 12 photo, the fully-assembled Pegasus XL rocket with the ICON satellite is prepared for attachment to its L-100 carrier aircraft at Vandenberg Air Force Base, California. Credit: NASA/Randy Beaudoin

(...) With that concern resolved, managers moved forward with plans to launch the Pegasus XL rocket with ICON on June 14. But engineers noticed an unexpected telemetry signal from the rocket’s rudder fin actuator after the L-1011’s departure June 6 from Vandenberg on a two-day ferry flight to Kwajalein.

During a planned stopover in Hawaii, officials decided to abort the mission and return the rocket to California for troubleshooting, giving up ICON’s launch slot at the busy military test range at Kwajalein. Workers removed the rocket from the carrier jet and returned it to the Building 1555 hangar, where they traced the problem to a faulty sensor requiring replacement.

That prompted NASA and Northrop Grumman to move the ICON launch from Kwajalein to a point off Florida’s east coast.
(...)

Northrop Grumman’s L-1011 carrier jet, named “Stargazer,” arrived at Cape Canaveral’s Skid Strip runway Friday. Credit: Northrop Grumman

The ICON mission will be the 44th launch of a Pegasus rocket on a satellite delivery mission, and the 34th in the Pegasus XL configuration with uprated solid rocket motors. It will be the seventh Pegasus launch based out of Cape Canaveral, which hosted the most recent Pegasus rocket mission in December 2016.
https://spaceflightnow.com/2018/10/23/pegasus-rocket-launch-postponed/

Polskie Forum Astronautyczne

Odp: Starty rakiet (IV kwartał 2018 roku)
« Odpowiedź #74 dnia: Października 30, 2018, 08:57 »