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Unmanned capsule misses space station

 
More money down the tube
User ID: 1020345
United States
07/04/2010 10:58 PM
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Unmanned capsule misses space station
It's funny when the craft misses the station they say nothing inside is important. But when you read and earlier article it says there is a new cargo ship on board with oxygen, food, propellant and so on....Nothing important.

Article here: [link to www.godlikeproductions.com]
Unmanned capsule misses space station

MSNBC
2010-07-03
An unmanned Russian cargo ship sailed past the International Space Station instead of docking on autopilot, as engineers on Earth struggle to determine what went wrong.

A telemetry lock between the Russian-made Progress module and the space station was lost and the module flew past at a safe distance. NASA said the crew was never in danger and that the supplies are not critical and will not affect station operations.

NASA said that it will not attempt another docking today. Russian flight controllers don't know yet what caused the failure in the unmanned modules automated docking system.

The robotic cargo ship Progress 38 was slated to dock at the space station at 12:58 p.m. ET (1658 GMT) but lost its navigational lock on the orbiting lab about 25 minutes before the rendezvous.

"The Progress literally flew past the station, but at a safe distance from the outpost," NASA commentator Rob Navias said. "The station crew reported seeing the Progress drift beyond their view, as they worked to reestablish telemetry with the spacecraft."

The Progress 38 spacecraft flew by the space station at a distance of several kilometers (a couple miles) away, posing no threat of impact. But because of its orbit, there may not be a second chance to dock the spacecraft by remote control today, Navias said.

What was inside is talked about here: [link to www.space.com]

New Robotic Cargo Ship Launches to Space Station
By Tariq Malik
SPACE.com Managing Editor
posted: 30 June 2010
12:43 pm ET
A Russian Soyuz rocket blasted off Wednesday carrying a new robotic cargo ship filled with tons of supplies for astronauts living on the International Space Station.
The Soyuz rocket soared into space at 11:35 a.m. EDT (1535 GMT) from the Central Asian spaceport of Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan carrying the unmanned Progress 38 cargo ship toward the space station. The robotic space freighter will dock at the station on Friday.
"Progress 38, on its way to the International Space Station," said a NASA mission commentator after the flawless launch.
Known in Russia as Progress M-06M, the new Progress 38 spacecraft is packed with nearly 2.5 tons of fresh food, clothes, equipment and other supplies for the space station's six-person crew.
Packed aboard the spacecraft are 1,918 pounds (nearly 870 kg) of propellant for the station, 110 pounds (nearly 50 kg) of oxygen, 220 pounds (99 kg) of water and 2,667 (1,209 kg) pounds of dry cargo – which includes spare parts, science equipment and other supplies.
About 213 pounds (97 kg) of the delivery ship's cargo is earmarked as items for the station crew. Astronauts always look forward to fresh fruit and other foods that arrive on Progress spacecraft, NASA officials have said.
Some personal treats for the station astronauts are sometimes included, but NASA officials kept mum on anything unique riding on Progress 38.
"Anything that would be of interest is probably a surprise," NASA spokesperson Kelly Humphries told SPACE.com from the Johnson Space Center in Houston.
The International Space Station is currently home to six people: Three Americans representing NASA and three Russian cosmonauts representing Russia's Federal Space Agency.
Progress 38 is scheduled to dock at the International Space Station on Friday at 12:58 p.m. EDT (1658 GMT). The cargo ship will park at an aft docking port on the station's Russian-built Zvezda module.
Earlier this week, the station crew moved one of its two Soyuz spacecraft from the Zvezda docking port to a different parking spot to clear the berth for the incoming cargo ship.
Russia's disposable Progress spacecraft are similar in appearance to the three-module Soyuz space taxis that ferry crews to and from the space station.
Both vehicles have a propulsion and orbital module, however Progress vehicles do not have a crew-carrying module like the Soyuz ships. Instead, Progress vehicles are equipped with a propellant module to store fuel for the space station's maneuvering thrusters.





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