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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Watching the Video the even happans @ 2:30-2:32
Science | Sun Jun 28, 2015 4:12pm EDT
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SpaceX rocket supplying space station explodes after Florida launch
BY IRENE KLOTZ
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. - An unmanned SpaceX rocket exploded about two minutes after liftoff from Florida on Sunday, destroying a cargo ship bound for the International Space Station in the latest in a string of mishaps in supplying the orbiting outpost.

The 208-foot-tall (63-meter) Falcon 9 rocket had flown 18 times previously since its 2010 debut, all successfully. Those missions included six station cargo runs for NASA under a 15-flight contract worth more than $2 billion.

However SpaceX, a company founded and owned by technology entrepreneur Elon Musk, has twice previously tried and failed in an experiment to land the rocket on a platform in the ocean.

Sunday's accident soon after liftoff from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station was the second successive botched mission to resupply the space station. A Russian Progress cargo ship failed to reach the outpost in April following a problem with its Soyuz launcher.

The cause of Sunday’s explosion was not yet clear, officials said.

"This was a blow to us. We lost a lot of research equipment on this flight," NASA Associate Administrator Bill Gerstenmaier told a news conference.

The explosion also marks a setback for SpaceX, or Space Exploration Technologies. The company was poised to compete for the first time against United Launch Alliance, a joint venture of Lockheed Martin Corp (
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) and the current sole launch provider for military and spy satellite launches, to launch a GPS III satellite.

An investigation into the explosion will ground the Falcon 9 rockets for "a number of months or so" but less than a year, SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell told the news conference.

A preliminary analysis indicated a problem with the rocket's upper-stage engine, Musk said on Twitter.

The company had hoped to use the rocket’s discarded 14-story-tall first stage in an innovative landing test, part of its overall goal to refurbish and refly its rockets, slashing launch costs.

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A platform had been stationed in the Atlantic Ocean in hopes of serving as a landing pad. Instead, the rocket broke apart in mid-air. Recovery teams were dispatched to attempt to collect debris for analysis.

Two previous experiments, in January and April, came close to succeeding but technical problems caused the rockets to crash into the platform.



SPACE STATION SUPPLIES

The International Space Station crew - two Russian cosmonauts and an American astronaut - has about four months of food and supplies on board, so the loss of the cargo shipment does not pose an immediate problem for them, said NASA station program manager Mike Suffredini.

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The station is expected to be returned to its full, six-member crew in July. But if food or water supplies dwindled to 45 days, some of the crew could return home via the Russian Soyuz capsules that are parked at the outpost.

Sunday’s accident leaves the United States temporarily dependent on Russia and Japan to resupply the station. NASA’s second cargo transporter, run by Orbital ATK (
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), remains grounded following a launch accident in October.

Russia hopes to return its troubled Soyuz rocket and Progress cargo ship to flight on Friday. Japan is slated to fly its HTV capsule to the station in August.

Sunday’s problem started about two minutes and 19 seconds after liftoff when SpaceX lost contact with the Falcon, NASA launch commentator George Diller said.

The accident occurred just before the rocket was to discard its first stage two minutes and 39 seconds after liftoff.

RELATED COVERAGE
Despite the explosion, one SpaceX customer voiced support in the company and the Falcon 9.

"One inevitable failure for such a young system should not in any way shake anyone's faith in the rocket or the team. What's amazing is that it took this long to happen," said Mike Gold, business operations director with Nevada-based Bigelow Aerospace.

The Dragon capsule was loaded with 5,461 pounds (2,477 kg) of food, clothing, equipment and science experiments for the space station, a $100 billion research laboratory that flies about 260 miles (420 km) above Earth.

Dragon is the only one of the four cargo ships flying to the station that can return science experiments and gear to Earth. The other spacecraft - Russia’s Progress, Orbital’s Cygnus and Japan’s HTV - burn up in the atmosphere after they make their deliveries and are released back into space.

Equipment lost aboard Dragon include a spacesuit, water filtration equipment, an oxygen tank and a docking system so space taxis under development by SpaceX and Boeing can park at the station. NASA hopes to turn over crew transportation to the U.S. companies before the end of 2017, breaking Russia’s monopoly.

Including its station cargo runs for NASA, SpaceX has a backlog of nearly 50 missions, worth more than $7 billion, including dozens of commercial communications satellites.

The company last month won U.S. Air Force certification to fly military and national security missions on the Falcon 9.

SpaceX holds a second NASA contract, worth up to $2.6 billion, to upgrade its Dragon capsule to fly astronauts to the station. Boeing’s contract is worth up $4.2 billion.



(Reporting by Irene Klotz; Additional reporting by
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in Washington; Editing by
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Space X and Nasa have "Locked the Doors" and are looking over the launch telemetry apart and will likely pick the through the Wreckage to Identify the cause. this is a blow to the program being the third fail for supply craft ( Progress form Russia, Orbital ATK, and now Falcon9) to ISS, but ISS has food and supplies stocked until October, there is also a Russian Progress set for launch on Friday. SpaceX has launched 18 Successful launches of the Falcon series.
 

Air Force Brat

Brigadier
Super Moderator
Watching the Video the even happans @ 2:30-2:32

Space X and Nasa have "Locked the Doors" and are looking over the launch telemetry apart and will likely pick the through the Wreckage to Identify the cause. this is a blow to the program being the third fail for supply craft ( Progress form Russia, Orbital ATK, and now Falcon9) to ISS, but ISS has food and supplies stocked until October, there is also a Russian Progress set for launch on Friday. SpaceX has launched 18 Successful launches of the Falcon series.

KAA BLAAAMO!
 

Zool

Junior Member
Footage pulled from the NASA TV Channel. The timing of the feed cut truly raises the eyebrow, but it does happen from time to time. What do you think this is?

 

vesicles

Colonel
Footage pulled from the NASA TV Channel. The timing of the feed cut truly raises the eyebrow, but it does happen from time to time. What do you think this is?


It's so fuzzy that no one can say what it is... But I imagine those ufologists will have a field day over this. Let me see if I can capture some of their way to deduce "truth"...

"you see that fuzzy thing floating by? No one knows what it is. Even NASA has no explanation for it. So it could be an alien ship..." and "the cut of the video feed in the middle is curious..."

After minutes of talking about other non-sense...

"How can you still say no to alien visitations when we have this irrefutable evidence of an alien ship flying by, which was captured in video by astronauts? We can definitively say that aliens still visit us, even today!" And "the govn't must've covered it up since they intentionally edited the video and hid the actual evidence of the alien ship".

You gotta admire their imaginative ways to confuse people...
 
Last edited:

Miragedriver

Brigadier
VVqEVhV.jpg

The Russian Progress-M spacecraft is ready to be lifted on its launch pad at Baikonur cosmodrome, Kazakhstan. An unmanned SpaceX rocket exploded about two minutes after liftoff from Florida on Sunday, destroying a cargo ship bound for the International Space Station in the latest in a string of mishaps in supplying the orbiting outpost. A Russian Progress cargo ship failed to reach the outpost in April following a problem with its Soyuz launcher. Russia hopes to return its troubled Soyuz rocket and Progress cargo ship to flight on Friday.
Picture: Reuters


Back to bottling my Grenache
 

TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
NASA told to resolve SLS Upper Stage dilemma
June 30, 2015 by Chris Bergin no alt
NASA officials have admitted the interim Upper Stage for the Space Launch System is at the top of their “worry list”, as the Agency’s key advisory group insists NASA should make a decision about bringing the more powerful Exploration Upper Stage (EUS) online sooner. The Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel (ASAP) fears NASA is at risk of wasting $150m on an Upper Stage they intend to “toss away”.

SLS Upper Stage:

The Space Launch System will be NASA’s launch vehicle of choice for deep space exploration missions, as the Agency returns to Beyond Earth Orbit (BEO) exploration.


Based on development and funding cycles, such exploration is targeted for the 2020s, ahead of the ultimate goal of launching crewed missions to Mars in the 2030s.

However, the vehicle was provided with an initial launch target of 2017, based on political language in the 2010 Authorization Act.

Such a target would have seen the rocket launched on an uncrewed test flight, prior to then standing down for another four years ahead of a crewed repeat of the first mission.

2015-06-30-123904The reason for such an advanced launch date was largely related to the caveat of Orion providing a “back up” role to the Commercial Crew Program (CCP) – in the event of a serious setback for (both of) the commercial providers.

Such a requirement was never taken too seriously by NASA, not least because such a scenario would involve the overpowered 70mT capable Block 1 SLS (as such launching with “tons of ballast”) lofting a Beyond Earth Orbit (BEO) designed Orion (to LEO), with a crew on its debut mission (safety rules call for a uncrewed debut), at a cost that would probably solve any of the Commercial Crew Program woes that initiated such a backup requirement.

While the opening mission for SLS has since slipped to 2018 – and the mission plans are now evolving – some of the fallout from the political language remains, specifically involving the “interim” Upper Stage.

The Block 1 SLS is the “basic model”, sporting a Delta Cryogenic Second Stage (DCSS), renamed the Interim Cryogenic Propulsion System (ICPS) for SLS.

The current plan calls for this stage to be used on Exploration Mission -1 (EM-1) and Exploration Mission -2 (EM-2), prior to moving to the EUS – also to be built by Boeing – that will become the workhorse for SLS.

However, using the ICPS on a crewed mission will require it to be human rated. It is likely NASA will also need to fly the EUS on an unmanned mission to validate the new stage ahead of human missions.

This has been presenting NASA with a headache for some time, although it took the recent ASAP meeting to finally confirm those concerns to the public.

2015-06-30-132507“The next big event is test flight Exploration Mission (EM)-1, on track for 2018 – a 24-day, uncrewed
cis-lunar voyage that will inject a lot of energy into the Program. The following flight, EM-2 that will have a crew, brings up an issue that deserves attention,” noted the minutes from the meeting.

“Presently, the Program does not have the upper stage that it needs because of lack of funding. A new upper stage, called the Exploration Upper Stage (EUS), will be developed for future crewed flights.

“As a fall back, NASA is planning to use the Interim Cryogenic Propulsion System (ICPS) that will get the job done through the test flight, but it is not what NASA will be using eventually.”

*Click here for more SLS News Articles*

The ASAP was told it will cost “at least $150 million” to human-rate the ICPS engine, something the panel believe “will be wasted because this design will be ‘tossed’ in the near future.”

2015-06-30-132743While the panel noted it understands NASA is at the mercy of political funding constraints, the ASAP informed the NASA managers present to have a “go/no-go” decision by this fall on which way to proceed, adding they wish to “encouraged those that control the funds to think about the best use of that $150 M – should it be applied to the new engine (the EUS) or the old?”

The DCSS for EM-1 is already into the process of “cutting metal” and will be into full production by the time that decision point is met.

While EM-1 is all-but certain to be flying with the DCSS during the test flight, the question of when to switch to the EUS is fast becoming a major focal point.

2015-06-30-132842Advancing the EUS to be ready for the start of crewed mission would remove a large concern, per comments made to the panel by Bill Hill, Associate Administrator for Exploration Systems Development (ESD).

Speaking of his “worry list”, the ICPS was classed as being at the very top. The concerns include completing the hazard analysis on time and the issue of a delay to some of the human-rating evaluations until later in the development cycle.

“This is a conservative use of money, but this delays the hazard analysis that normally is done as part of the design. When hazard analysis are done late, they simply document the design instead of informing it. This is a classic mistake in the system safety world,” added the minutes.

2015-06-30-132927This could also be a smart move on NASA’s part, given almost everyone within the SLS Program is eager to move to the EUS as soon as possible, not least because it opens up the mission capabilities for the Heavy Lift Launch Vehicle – with the current lack of missions a major public concern.

There is also now political language to help facilitate the switch, laying the foundations to support a key decision point that calls for an advancement of the EUS plans.

“The Committee is concerned that NASA will attempt to take the Interim Cryogenic Propulsion Stage (ICPS) that will be used for EM–1 and create a human-rated variant. In doing so, NASA would spend $150,000,000 to develop a human-rated engine that would be used only once, before being replaced by the Exploration Upper Stage (EUS),” noted a Senate appropriations committee report.

Z8“Such planning wastes valuable time and funding resources that should be used for developing the EUS from the beginning so that it will be available for all crewed SLS missions.

“To ensure proper funding, the Committee provides $1,900,000,000 in fiscal year 2016 for SLS, with no less than $100,000,000 provided for the direct development of the EUS to be used for EM-2.

“This funding level is necessary in order for the SLS to continue its progress towards a successful EM–1 launch as early as possible in 2018, to facilitate development of essential EUS propulsion hardware, and to begin the procurement process of long lead items for a crewed launch in 2021.”

The SLS teams are waiting for the language to become law, allowing them to press on with the EUS study work and install it into SLS’ plans.

2015-06-30-131229Additional problems with having to start with an interim Upper Stage are also impacting on other elements associated with SLS, such as the Mobile Launcher.

The ML’s conversion from its role with the defunct Ares I launch vehicle are almost complete.

However, its array of umbilicals and connections are being worked with the ICPS in mind.

No design work has been approved for SLS using the EUS, although the changes between the SLS using DCSS and EUS wouldn’t be too drastic.

It is understood that SLS’s Crew Access Arm (CAA) and the Orion Service Module Umbilical (OSMU) – which will provide electrical, data, and purging processes to Orion’s Service Module – will be moved up the launch tower to match the Orion’s position on the stack with the EUS.

All the core stage arms and stabilizer will remain exactly as they are in the original plan, while there will be a new second stage hydrogen vent arm, similar or identical to the Core Stage Forward Skirt Umbilical arm.

However, the second stage LOX and LH2 umbilical arms will likely require a redesign during the switch.

Other considerations include the engines that will be used on the EUS.

Evaluations into the EUS have already reached the Point of Depature (POD) stage, baselining the SLS Block IB Upper Stage with four RL-10-C1 engine stage – a switch away from the now defunct J-2X engines – with a maximum propellant load of 285,000 lbm.

Z3Per the POD overview (L2), the EUS will carry a length NTE (Not To Exceed) 60 ft, an LH2 tank diameter of 8.4 m, and a LOX tank diameter of 5.5 m.

While it is likely the RL-10s will be the engine of choice, other options include utilizing four MB-60 engines – which would provide even more power to the stage.

It has also been suggested that the Block 1B version of SLS, sporting the EUS and advanced boosters could provide all the required upmass capability NASA envisions for the rocket, which would allow for the funds allocated for the final evolution to the Block 2 SLS being redirected into payloads and missions.

(Images: L2’s SLS Sections and L2 artist Nathan Koga for some of the EUS and SLS in her correct color scheme of an unpainted core.)

(NSF and L2 are providing full exploration roadmap level coverage, available no where else on the internet, from Orion and SLS to ISS and COTS/CRS/CCDEV, to European and Russian vehicles.)

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TerraN_EmpirE

Tyrant King
Science | Wed Jul 1, 2015 6:01pm EDT
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Air Force says rocket accident won’t bump SpaceX from competition
CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA./WASHINGTON | BY IRENE KLOTZ AND
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An unmanned Space Exploration Technologies Falcon 9 rocket launches in Cape Canaveral, Florida, June 28, 2015.
REUTERS/MICHAEL BERRIGAN


SpaceX can compete to launch a U.S. Global Positioning System satellite despite a Falcon 9 rocket accident this weekend, the Air Force said on Wednesday.

“SpaceX remains certified and can compete for the upcoming GPS III launch service,” Lt. General Samuel Greaves, who heads the Air Force’s Space and Missile Systems Center, wrote in an email to Reuters.

The Air Force plans to release a solicitation for launch service proposals this month, the first time SpaceX, which is owned and operated by technology entrepreneur Elon Musk, will be eligible to compete against United Launch Alliance (ULA). The joint-venture of Lockheed-Martin and Boeing has had a monopoly on the military’s launch business.

In May, SpaceX won a hard-fought, two-year battle to have its Falcon 9 rocket certified to fly military and national security satellites. On Sunday, one of those rockets exploded after liftoff.

The cause of the accident, which claimed a cargo ship heading to the International Space Station for NASA and was the first Falcon 9 launch failure in 19 flights, is under investigation.

While not directly involved in the mission, the Air Force said it has been invited to observe the accident investigation and has offered support.

SpaceX is leading the investigation, with support from NASA and the Federal Aviation Administration, which oversees commercial space launches in the United States.

Preliminary analysis indicates a problem with the liquid oxygen system of the rocket’s upper-stage engine.

SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell told reporters after the accident that Falcon 9 launches would be suspended “a number of months, or so” pending the results of the investigation.

“We are working with our partners to prepare for potential delays on the order of a few months,” SpaceX wrote in an email to Reuters.

The rocket that blew up on Sunday was the third cargo ship lost in the past eight months. In October, an Orbital ATK Antares rocket exploded seconds after liftoff from Virginia. Orbital is buying new engines for the rocket and expects to return to flight next year.

In April, a Russian Progress capsule failed to separate properly from its Soyuz launcher, dooming the ship. Russia hopes to break the string of launch failures with liftoff of another Soyuz rocket and Progress capsule at 12:55 a.m. EDT/0455 GMT on Friday.



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Space Base in New Zealand Picked to Start Private Trips to Orbit
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July 1, 2015 — 11:01 AM EDT

New Zealand, known for breathtaking scenery and fine wine, will add one more claim to fame when it becomes home to the world’s first commercial space-launch site later this year.

A U.S. company,
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plans to build a base on New Zealand’s South Island from which to loft small satellites into low orbit. The goal is to increase the pace and affordability of sending up imaging and communication gear used for services including weather monitoring, natural disaster management and crop surveillance.

“Creating and operating our own launch site is a necessity to meet the demands of our growing customer manifest,” Chief Executive Officer Peter Beck said Wednesday. “With the launch frequency possible from this site, Rocket Lab is one major step closer to its goal of making space commercially accessible.”


Rocket Lab joins a formidable group of competitors, including Boeing Co. and Lockheed Martin Corp., seeking to shake up a
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commercial launch business whose crowded schedules can require years-long waits and price tags of $200 million.

Rocket Lab’s all-black Electron booster offers launch for less than $5 million. The company, whose investors include Lockheed Martin, is targeting clients such as university programs and small start-ups, Beck said, and it already has 30 potential clients.

The company didn’t specify how much it was investing in the site, which is due to be completed in the fourth quarter.

Prime Location
New Zealand, which has been used in the past by the National Aeronautical and Space Administration, is considered a prime location because rockets launched from that deep in the Southern hemisphere can reach a wide range of Earth orbits.

Rocket Lab’s remote site on the Kaitorete Spit in the Canterbury region also means it has less air and sea traffic, which translates into more frequent launches and economies of scale, the company said. It also will no longer compete for airspace with the U.S. government.

U.S. commercial rocket providers, such as Elon Musk’s Space Exploration Technologies Corp., are currently tethered to government-operated launch pads like Florida’s Cape Canaveral, Wallops Island in Virginia and the Vandenberg Air Force Base in California. SpaceX is building a commercial launch site in South Texas that it said should be ready for liftoffs as early as 2016.

Commercial companies have to pay large fees to use those U.S. government sites, according to Marco Caceres, an analyst with consultant Teal Group Corp.

“In the long term it would be beneficial to own your own site,” as long you have enough missions going in and out to make it worth the cost to build, Caceres said in an interview.
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bd popeye

The Last Jedi
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Scooby dooby doo! Howdy boys.. look what I found on sina..

06.20.2015...Recent photos of the former Soviet Buran Space shuttle in the dilapidated Baikonur Cosmodrome. The site is now abandoned and decaying. Follow the link for 44 photos..oh yeah.. the captions are in Chinese

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