News on private spaceflight
- Lego-man in space
- First Vega launch feb 9
- NASA's Nanosail-D 'Sails' Home - Mission Complete
- Europes first Vega rocket to be launched in January
- Re-use of de-commisioned satelittes
- 3 successes for Europa
- Historic launch of first Galileo navigation-satellittes
- Spaceship Company one step closer to space tourism
- "We have lost control of the space environment"
- Plans for space-reactors
- China to launch space station module
- Danish rocket-launch friday
- New megthod for tracking spacejunk: Star-occultations
- Renewed interest in European spaceplane
- US Defence plans for "100 year spaceship" to nearest stars
- USA are worrying over China in space and seeks rules
- First European launch of a Soyuz rocket
- SpaceX milestone accomplished
- Nanosail descends to Earth
- NASA awards contracts for commercial crew-transportation
- Students launches record-breaking balloon
- SpaceX announces its Falcon Heavy rocket
- Private solar-sale spaceship launches this summer
- European Space debris programme
- European launch order to spaceX
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Historic launch of first Galileo navigation-satellittes
Wednesday, 19 October 2011 13:02
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| Spaceflight - Private spaceflight |
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International space cooperation will be highlighted in a historic event on 20 October: the launch of Europe’s first Galileo navigation satellites on Russia’s first Soyuz rocket to depart from Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana. Liftoff is scheduled for Thursday, 20 October at 12:34 CEST (10:34 GMT, 07:34 local time). The launch will be the first time that Russia’s venerable Soyuz vehicle has ascended from European territory, adding a trusted workhorse to Europe’s launchers family. This Soyuz-2 version is the latest in the renowned family of Russian rockets that began the space race more than 50 years ago by carrying both the first satellite, Sputnik, and the first man, Yuri Gagarin, into space. Riding Soyuz will be the first two operational satellites in the Galileo constellation that will provide Europe with an independent global satellite navigation system. Media can follow this important event live at one of the many launch events being organised around Europe, via satellite for broadcasters or on the web. Source: ESA |




