News Roscosmos News

Russia comes first by space garbage volume, third by satellite grouping

January 25, 2016

The largest space grouping is held by the United States (542 satellites) followed by China (163) and Russia (139)


Russia’s satellite grouping is the third biggest by the number of satellites after the United States and China but Russia still has the largest volume of garbage in orbit, according to a report released by the Federal Space Agency (Roscosmos) on Monday.

The 2015 final report was prepared by specialists of the ballistic center of the Central Research Institute of Machine Building (TsNIImash), which is Roscosmos’ leading institute.

"The largest number of space garbage objects belongs to such countries as Russia (6,169 space objects), the United States (4,878) and China (3,645)," the report says.

Meanwhile, of all existing satellites (active, back-up space vehicles and satellites undergoing flight trials and partially operational), the largest space grouping is held by the United States (542 satellites) followed by China (163) and Russia (139), according to the report.

The Russian satellite grouping was not far behind the Chinese constellation in April 2015. According to Head of the Roscosmos Scientific and Technical Council Yuri Koptev, the Russian satellite grouping was by five satellites smaller than the Chinese constellation at that time. "Today we are not in the best condition," he said.

Overall, 17,472 man-made space objects were listed in the near-Earth space as of December 31, 2015. Of this number, 1,442 are operational spacecraft and the remaining 16,030 are space garbage, including 2,689 inactive satellites.

Also, there are 1,931 acceleration units and 1,931 upper stages of carrier rockets in orbit, along with 11,041 fragments of space vehicles, boosters and carrier rocket upper stages.

http://tass.ru/en/science/851903
 
So, if my newsfeed is correct, the fist launch from Vostochny has been delayed and is scheduled for tomorrow (?)
 
So, if my newsfeed is correct, the fist launch from Vostochny has been delayed and is scheduled for tomorrow (?)

Yes it is correct. Putin is attending the launch tomorrow and is currently staying at the spaceport.
 
.... and the 4º R7 launch site is now active! :hailprobe:
Hopefully Mr. P was impressed with the launch and increases funding for space. :P

---------- Post added at 03:30 AM ---------- Previous post was at 03:09 AM ----------

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ynEIFyu-Eg"]zapusk[/ame]
 
Last edited:
Looks like they finally got the video as they wanted it :shifty:
[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q-FltpndeIs"]onboard[/ame]
 
How come it rolls 180 degrees after it clears the pad? Isn't the pad supposed to roll for it?
 
How come it rolls 180 degrees after it clears the pad? Isn't the pad supposed to roll for it?

The rocket now has guidance system that does the roll, so there's no need to rotate the pad to aim it.
 
RussianSpaceWeb: Super-launcher is back on the books

energia5v_vr_info_1.jpg
 
3rd launch (4th counting the A1.2) in 7 years... if they don't increase the launch rate, even SLS will launch more often. :rolleyes:
 
in the new 2022??, three launches of the Angara rocket are planned (all with active satellites)
 
Angara a5 rocket does not belong to Roscosmos, it is a direct competitor. launch rocket with christmas snow
Thank you for pointing this out. I thought that Proton is a cold-war icon that will be replaced by the purely civilian home-grown Angara rocket in this decade.
 
Last edited:
Thank you for pointing this out. I thought that Proton is a cold-war icon that will be replaced by home-grown Angara in this decade.
It's hard for me to imagine how Proton and the Cold War are combined. The Angara missile is in the military for the time of testing after testing is transferred to commercial use
 
Proton (rather UR-500) was intended as a super-heavy ICBM but it very quickly became obvious it would be an easy target on the ground. Despite of that, it had quite a successful career as a launcher !
 
UR-200 was used in the 60s "Legenda" program. NASA bought nuclear engines and used it in a Juno (spacecraft) during the flight to Jupiter.
zemlya_ballisticheskie_raketi_zemlya-zemlya_mezhkontinentalnie_ballisticheskie_raketi_ur-200_8...jpg
 
Back
Top