Screen capture of the liftoff of Proton-M/Breeze-M - SES4
SpaceflightNow updates archive :
2000 GMT (3:00 p.m. EST)
The Breeze M upper stage and SES 4 are now in a coast period that will last until T+67 minutes, 33 seconds. That is when the stage re-ignites for an 17-minute, 44-second burn.
A third firing will begin at T+plus 3 hours, 28 minutes and last for 11 minutes. Following completion of its third burn of the mission, the Breeze M will jettison its emptied Additional Propellant Tank. The stage then restarts at T+3 hour, 41 minutes for a six-minute firing.
A final six-minute burn will occur at T+plus 8 hours, 53 minutes to finish shaping the orbit.
Spacecraft separation to complete the launch is targeted to occur at T+plus 9 hours, 12 minutes, or 0448 GMT (11:48 p.m. EST).
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1956 GMT (2:56 p.m. EST)
International Launch Services reports that the first burn of Breeze M was successfully completed to put the vehicle into a preliminary parking orbit. Today's mission is going according to plan.
1951 GMT (2:51 p.m. EST)
The Breeze M upper stage did ignite to achieve a low-altitude parking orbit around Earth. This burn should last about four-and-a-half minutes in total duration.
1947 GMT (2:47 p.m. EST)
Telemetry confirms that the third stage finished firing and jettisoned, finishing the Proton M rocket's role in the ascent. The Breeze M upper stage now must perform its five burns.
1945 GMT (2:45 p.m. EST)
T+plus 9 minutes. The third stage should complete its burn in about a minute, followed by separation of the spent motor. The Breeze M and attached SES 4 spacecraft will then be on a suborbital trajectory in preparation for the first of five planned firings by the upper stage to reach geosynchronous transfer orbit over the next several hours.
1944 GMT (2:44 p.m. EST)
T+plus 8 minutes. Second stage separation has occurred and ignition of the Proton third stage has been confirmed. Also, the payload fairing enclosing the SES 4 spacecraft atop the rocket has separated.
1939 GMT (2:39 p.m. EST)
T+plus 3 minutes. The Proton continues streaking to space on the power of the second stage. Vehicle performance is reported normal.
1938 GMT (2:38 p.m. EST)
T+plus 2 minutes, 10 seconds. The six main engines on the first stage have extinguished and the spent stage just separated. Now, the four second stage engines are up and burning as planned.
1938:07 GMT (2:38:07 p.m. EST)
T+plus 90 seconds. Just over a half-minute remaining in the first stage burn. Everything is looking good with the flight.
1937:37 GMT (2:37:37 p.m. EST)
T+plus 60 seconds. The vehicle is now approaching the period of maximum dynamic pressure during its climb through the atmosphere.
1937:07 GMT (2:37:07 p.m. EST)
T+plus 30 seconds. The Proton rocket is performing its roll maneuver to achieve the proper launch heading for flight downrange. All six first stage liquid-fueled engines are up and burning.
1936:37 GMT (2:36:37 p.m. EST)
LIFTOFF! Liftoff of the Russian Proton rocket and the SES 4 international telecommunications satellite!
1935:37 GMT (2:35:37 p.m. EST)
T-minus 60 seconds. All systems remain "go" for liftoff at the precise and instantaneous launch time a minute from now.
1934:37 GMT (2:34:37 p.m. EST)
T-minus 2 minutes. The countdown is being run by a master computer sequencer.
1931 GMT (2:31 p.m. EST)
T-minus 5 minutes. The launch readiness of the Proton core vehicle, Breeze M upper stage and SES 4 spacecraft will be verified over the next few minutes in the countdown.
1926 GMT (2:26 p.m. EST)
T-minus 10 minutes and counting. The Proton rocket weighs 1,554,000 pounds as it sits on the launch pad. The SES 4 spacecraft accounts for 13,625 pounds of the weight.
1924 GMT (2:24 p.m. EST)
T-minus 12 minutes and counting. At launch the Proton's six first stage engines will fire together to propel the 191-foot-tall rocket into the middle-of-the-night sky at Baikonur. Liftoff is scheduled for 1:36 a.m. local time at Baikonur.
1820 GMT (2:20 p.m. EDT)
Weather conditions are within limits for today's Proton launch. The latest report at Baikonur indicates a few clouds, good visibility, a temperature of -7 degrees F and a northeasterly winds of 7 to 9 mph.
1915 GMT (2:15 p.m. EST)
The live launch broadcast begins streaming now. Clocks continue to count toward a liftoff at 1936 GMT.
1900 GMT (2:00 p.m. EST)
Here's a look at some stats about today's mission. This will be:
373rd Proton rocket launch since 1965
70th International Launch Services Proton
53rd Proton M using a Breeze M upper stage since 2001
1st Proton of 2012
21st SS/L-made satellite on ILS Proton
20th SES satellite launch on ILS Proton
1830 GMT (1:30 p.m. EST)
Retraction of the launch pad's mobile service tower from the Proton rocket has begun as preparations continue for today's ascent of the SES 4 communications satellite.
The three-stage Proton core vehicle and Breeze M upper stage are fully fueled, a process that began about six hours before launch time. Liftoff remains scheduled for 1936 GMT (2:36 p.m. EST) from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.
The six engines on the Proton first stage will ignite at launch to push the 19-story rocket away from Earth on two million pounds of thrust. After first stage separation two minutes into flight, four engines aboard the second stage fire for three-and-a-half minutes before shutting down and jettisoning. The Proton's third stage then comes to life for its four-minute job, during which time the protective payload fairing shielding SES 4 will separate.
The Breeze M upper stage then assumes control of the mission to conduct a series of five critical burns spread across nine hours to propel the payload into the proper orbit by tonight.
1810 GMT (1:10 p.m. EST)
The Russian State Commission met several hours ago to review the readiness for launch and granted approval to load propellants into the Proton vehicle. That fueling operation has now been completed, officials report, as the activities progress towards a 1936 GMT (2:36 p.m. EST) liftoff today.
Meanwhile, the payload team has finished topping off the SES 4 satellite's onboard battery system for the ride to orbit.