• Russia launches Soyuz rocket with Iranian satellite and CubeSats

    From NasaSpaceFlight@1337:1/100 to All on Tue Aug 9 18:00:03 2022
    Russia launches Soyuz rocket with Iranian satellite and CubeSats

    Date:
    Tue, 09 Aug 2022 16:46:29 +0000

    Description:
    At 05:52 UTC on August 9, a Soyuz 2.1b/Fregat-M rocket launched from Site
    31/6 at The post Russia launches Soyuz rocket with Iranian satellite and CubeSats appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .

    FULL STORY ======================================================================

    At 05:52 UTC on August 9, a Soyuz 2.1b/Fregat-M rocket launched from Site
    31/6 at the Baikonur Cosmodrome carrying the Khayyam satellite for Iran and
    16 CubeSats for various institutions and universities.

    The launch was originally scheduled for as early as the summer of 2021 but
    was delayed multiple times.



    The satellite, named Khayyam after a 12th-century Persian mathematician, is potentially based on the NPK Barl-designed Alpha-ES satellite. See Also Khayyam Updates Russian Launchers Section L2 Russian Section Click here to Join L2

    Alpha-ES boasts an image resolution of 0.7 m and can take panchromatic images as well as near-infrared images.

    The project, sometimes referred to as Project 505, has been in the works
    since 2015 when Russia and Iran publicly disclosed their intentions at the bi-annual MAKS aerospace show in Russia.

    Irans Press TV news service published an article listing the four major partners in the project with the Russian partners being NPK Barl, a manufacturer of ground support systems, and NPO VNII Elektromekhaniki (VNIIEM), a remote sensing satellite builder.

    The two Russian companies would work alongside the Iranian company Bonyan Danesh Shargh and the Iranian Space Agency to design and operate the
    satellite in orbit, with Bonyan Danesh Shargh being responsible for in-orbit operations.

    While the project occasionally appeared in both Russian and Iranian news reports over the following three years, the contract had not yet been signed in May of 2018, when NPK Barl was placed on the US State Departments
    sanctions list. It appears that most of the delays to the project were due to negotiations over the price of the satellite, called Irans National Remote Sensing Satellite by Irans Minister for Telecommunications and Information Technology Mahmoud Vaezi. A graphic showing the Alpha-ES satellite design. (Credit: NPK Barl)

    No news was published about the contract after the sanctions were imposed, leading to speculation as to whether the contract had been signed, but the status of the project became clear in February of 2021 during a discussion on the future of Russias commercial space industry.

    Valeriy Labutin, introduced as the general designer of NPK Barl, revealed
    that the company would conduct the first launch of a Russian commercial
    remote sensing satellite for a foreign customer in the second quarter of the year. All the infrastructure has been deployed, all tests completed, and were ready to launch the satellite this year. He did not disclose the identity of the customer.

    The satellite appears to be a modified version of the NPK Barl-built Alpha-ES satellite. The satellite has a mass of 650 kg and a linear resolution of 0.73 meters. Designed to have an active life of five years, the satellite is equipped with four solar panels deviating from the design of the Alpha-ES.

    The Soyuz launch vehicle can be traced back to the R-7 Semyorka ICBM, first introduced by the Soviet Union in 1957. While Soyuz now flies with three stages, the heritage can still clearly be seen, with the overall design of
    the first and second stages being similar to their original design. The Soyuz 2.1b rocket is rolled out at Baikonur before launch. (Credit: KazTAG)

    The Soyuz 2.1b variant flown today features the standard four side boosters surrounding the Blok-A second stage with an upgraded third stage powered by
    an RD-0124, an upgrade over the traditional RD-0110. Also on board is the Fregat-M fourth stage used to inject payloads into their final orbits, typically only used when the three stages of Soyuz cannot directly inject large payloads into the desired orbit.

    Established in June of 1955, Baikonur Cosmodrome was built as a base of operations for the Soviet Unions space program as well as a test range for ICBMs.

    The first artificial satellite, Sputnik 1, was launched to orbit from Site 1/5, also known as Gagarins Start, on board a rocket of the same name in
    1957. The first human in orbit, Yuri Gagarin, was launched from the same pad on board Vostok 1 four years later.

    Another major launch complex at Baikonur is Site 110, which boasts two pads, 110/37 and 110/38. All our launches of the N1 moon rocket were launched from the complex, with each pad launching two N1s.

    The Soviet Space Shuttle Buran would later go on to launch from Site 110/37. While there was only one launch of Buran, 110/37 would be considered as a launch site for the Russian Angara rocket, but the other launch site of Energia, Site 250, would be chosen.

    (Lead photo: Soyuz 2.1b lifts off with Khayyam and 16 CubeSats. Credit: Roscosmos)

    The post Russia launches Soyuz rocket with Iranian satellite and CubeSats appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .



    ======================================================================
    Link to news story: https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2022/08/russia-soyuz-iranian-satellite/


    --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A47 (Linux/64)
    * Origin: tqwNet Science News (1337:1/100)