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This is a set of photos I'd like to see, should they be made public, please post a link here.
Aboard the International Space Station, Expedition 30 Flight Engineer Andre Kuipers of the European Space Agency discussed the work being conducted on the orbital laboratory and the European Columbus module during an in-flight event with European industry leaders and students gathered in Bremen, Germany, Jan. 25. Kuipers has been aboard the station since December and is in the midst of a five-month mission punctuated by scientific research.
27/01/2012 15:49
MOSCOW, January 27 - RIA Novosti. Starting a new crew to the International Space Station (ISS) can be moved from March 30 to a later date because of the assumptions, according to preliminary data, negligence, when assembling capsule "Soyuz TMA-04M," the source told RIA Novosti in missile space industry.
"The launch will be postponed. Rather, from 30 March to late April, but more accurately it will be possible when the Commission on the landing vehicle is finished," - said the source. The source said the decision to postpone the official launch has not been made, but it will be done soon.
In connection with the planned transfer start a new expedition to stay current on the ISS crew will probably be extended. "This is a short expedition, so that their stay at the station, in principle, you can safely extend," - said the source.
He noted that an unacceptable leak checking lander "Union" leak was discovered during tests on Sunday.
"The reason most likely - the human factor in the assembly pnevmoshemy" - a spokesman said. According to sources, making the following re-entry capsule to RSC "Energia" will be accelerated, the work of the enterprise will be conducted in three shifts.
"And from that at which a defect, are specialists. The next apparatus, according to my sources, is already on the Keys to the test with him should be no problem", - concluded the source.
The technological cycle of re-entry vehicles on RSC "Energia" lasts from 40 days to two months.
However, the spokesman said that the transfer run from March to late April does not mean that the next manned launch after a pre-designated on 30 May, and will be rescheduled.
"It is not necessary that the next move will start. If the capsule will be ready, the next manned will in time", - concluded the source.
On a spacecraft "Soyuz TMA-04M" to the ISS Russian cosmonauts have to go Gennady Padalka and Sergei Revin, as well as American astronaut Joseph Acaba. Currently, the ISS crew works of the 30th expedition of Commander Daniel Burbank (USA) and flight engineers Shkaplerova Anton, Anatolii Ivanishin, Oleg Kononenko (all - Russia), Andre Kuipers (Netherlands) and Donald Pettit (USA).
The Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel’s annual report includes a fascinating section about the risk of losing a mission related to the International Space Station (ISS).
“Analyses presented to the ASAP on several occasions, most recently in May 2011, stated that the probabilistic risk assessment (PRA) related to ISS Loss of Mission (LOM) was 1 in 55 for a 180-day mission. Since there are approximately 20 180-day missions in the currently projected ISS Program, this means that there is a greater-than-30-percent chance that the ISS could sustain a LOM sometime during its projected operating life,” ASAP wrote.
That’s a lot higher than you might think. And if it happened, the result could be quite dire.
“Should such an event occur, the result could arise that the ISS would have to be abandoned—potentially without the possibility of a return to nominal operation. Thus, a premature ISS de-orbit is one potential outcome. This can occur in either a controlled or an uncontrolled manner, with the latter clearly the more dangerous. While this possibility has been known for some time, NASA has not yet shared with the Panel an explicit plan to deal with this situation,” the report reads.
ASAP recommends that NASA begin immediate planning for various contingencies and that those plans be shared and coordinated with the other ISS partners.
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Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel Annual Report For 2011 (PDF)Moscow January 27. INTERFAX.RU. Crewmembers of ithe ISS will have to stay in orbit for at least one month longer than they anticipated, told Interfax a source from Rocket&Space industry this Friday.
"The descent module from Soyuz TMA-05M was already produced and can be reinstalled to Soyuz TMA-04M. However, entailing tests will take about 50 days, and 40 more days are required to prepare the spaceship at Baikonur. Therefore, its launch is not possible before late April, and it means that the current expedition will have to stay 1 - 1.5 months longer at the ISS."
I really feel sorry for Roskosmos, they're having incredibly bad luck lately...
If Roskosmos employees mishandled test equipment, it's not called bad luck. It's, in fact, a big luck if an accident related to space really happens due to a "Bad Luck".
This incident however obviously raises further concerns about Russian hardware. This whole situation is starting to feel like a nightmare, one which is occurring at the worst possible moment (no more Shuttle, no commercial capability).![]()
According to NK forum (link), not just the descend module is going to be replaced at the damaged Soyuz TMA #704, but the whole spacecraft won't go to space and instead item #705 will be designated Soyuz TMA-04M (used to be TMA-05M).
Additionally, the poster informed that two people died from stress that followed test abnormality with #704. A rumor is, a master engineer of the vacuum chamber rig had a sudden lethal heart attack near the enterprise's guard desk after having a meeting with management.