News on ISS
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- ISS-astronauts to cath the Lyrid-meteor-shower in 3D
- ESA' heavist launch ever
- Worlds best view
- SpaecX prepares for ISS-mission
- Astronauts captures unprecedented view of comet
- ESA to test experimental reentry vehicle in 2014
- Time-laps video of Earth from ISS
- Space tekescope on ISS could reveal neutron stars interior
- Spaceflights affect astronauts vision
- China starts construction of spacestation
- Chinese launch accompanied by "America"
- Sunrise over the Earth and ISS
- NASA reveals the space-shuttle's successor
- Assembly start of NASA's new Orion space modules
- Russian supply-ship crashed
- Live 3D video from space
- SpaceX prepares for launches to ISS
- A tribute to the space-shuttles
- Spacedebris on collision-course with ISS
- Spaceshuttle Atlantis arrived at ISS
- End of the spaceshuttle era
- Spacejunk passes closely by ISS
- Spaceshuttle Endeavour landed and Atlantis ready for launch
- Space shuttle Endeavour at ISS
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ESAs Kepler ATV to launch tuesday
Sunday, 13 February 2011 22:06
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| Spaceflight - ISS |
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ESA’s latest Automated Transfer Vehicle is ready for launch to the International Space Station on Tuesday, 15/2, 22:08 UT from Europe’s Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana. The unmanned spaceship will deliver essential supplies and reboost the Station during its mission lasting 3½ months. The launch will be covered live from Kourou for broadcasters and on the Web, and celebrated at a launch event in Bremen, Germany. Europe’s second ATV Johannes Kepler is the first operational ATV, following the highly successful Jules Verne qualification flight in 2008. With a total mass of over 20 tonnes, it is the heaviest payload ever launched by Europe. ATV is a highly sophisticated spacecraft, combining an autonomous free-flying platform, a manoeuvrable space vehicle and – when docked – a space station module. To achieve an automated docking under the very tight safety constraints imposed by human spaceflight rules, ATV carries high-precision navigation systems, highly redundant flight software and a fully autonomous collision-avoidance system with its own independent power supplies, control and thrusters. About 10 m high with a diameter of 4.5 m, ATV includes a 45m3 pressurised module and a Russian docking system, similar to those used on the Soyuz manned ferries and the Progress resupply ships. With its solar wings deployed, ATV spans 22 m. Almost three times larger than Russia’s Progress, it can also deliver about three times the cargo load. Propellant and cargo for the ISS
Once docked to the ISS, this propellant will be used by ATV’s own thrusters to raise the Station’s orbit periodically in order to compensate for the natural decay caused by atmospheric drag. It may also be used to move the ISS out of the way of potentially dangerous space debris that comes too close to the manned space complex. ATV’s payload includes almost 1600 kg of dry cargo, 850 kg of propellant for Russia’s Zvezda module and 100 kg of oxygen. Before leaving the ISS, in June, Johannes Kepler will be filled with waste bags and unwanted hardware by the crew. It will then be deorbited over the Southern Pacific Ocean and perform a controlled reentry to burn up harmlessly in the atmosphere. Exceptionally, no drinking water will be delivered because there is already plenty aboard the ISS. The water tanks will, though, be filled with liquid waste from the Station before departure. ATV Johannes Kepler is named after the famous German astronomer and mathematician who lived in the 16th and 17th centuries. He first depicted the movement of planetary bodies in elliptical orbits, thus paving the way for Isaac Newton’s theory of gravitation. It is the second in a series of five spaceships developed as Europe’s contribution to the operational costs of the ISS. Astrium Space Transportation is prime industrial contractor, leading a team of more than 30 contractors in 10 European countries. Covering the launch The latest high-resolution images can be found by registering on ESA’s Photo Library for Professionals: www.esa-photolibrary.com/ |





