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Foton Satellite Launch To Go Ahead Despite Proton Crash

File image.
by Staff Writers
Moscow (RIA Novosti) Sep 11, 2007
The recent crash of a Russian Proton-M rocket will not affect the launch of a Foton bio-satellite piggybacked on a Soyuz rocket, since the two rockets are entirely different, a spokesman for the Federal Space Agency said Tuesday. A Proton-M rocket with a Japanese communications satellite on board crashed September 6 shortly after launch from the Baikonur space center in Kazakhstan.

"The Proton is a heavy rocket, which uses highly toxic heptyl as fuel, whereas Soyuz is a medium-class booster using environmentally friendly fuel - kerosene and liquid oxygen," the spokesman said, adding that the two rockets are also produced by different plants - in Moscow and in Samara, respectively.

He said the preparation for the launch, set for September 14, is ongoing.

The Foton-M is a joint project of the European Space Agency and the Russian Federal Space Agency, and is primarily used "for physics and materials science experimentation in weightlessness."

The chairman of the Kazakh National Aerospace Agency said the Russian government failed to send a special commission to visit the site of the crash.

Talgat Musabayev said only members of an expert team from the upper house of the Russian parliament, the Federation Council, were working at the scene.

Kazakhstan said last Friday it wants to ban rocket launches from its Baikonur space center, which Russia rents, whenever the Kazakh president is near the launch site.

The Proton-M rocket, which was launched from the Baikonur space center at 2:43 a.m. Thursday Moscow time (10:43 p.m. GMT Wednesday), experienced an engine malfunction and second-stage separation failure 139 seconds into its flight, and came down in the central Kazakh steppe, 50 kilometers (30 miles) southeast of the town of Zhezkazgan.

Possible environmental contamination from the booster's highly toxic fuel was a particular concern at the time, and a team was been sent to the crash site to determine the extent of any pollution.

Source: RIA Novosti

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Russia To Launch UAE Spacecraft In 2008 From Baikonur
Abu Dhabi, UAE (RIA Novosti) Sep 11, 2007
The chief of Russia's space agency said Monday Russia would launch a spacecraft for the United Arab Emirates (UAE) in 2008 from the launch site in Kazakhstan. "We plan to launch a remote sensing satellite for the UAE in 2008," Anatoly Perminov said, adding that a related agreement had been signed on the sidelines of President Vladimir Putin's first visit to the Arab state.







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