Jonathan's Space Report 23 Oct 1991 (no.92) I've been away for a couple of weeks, so there's a bit to catch up on: ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Atlantis was moved to the VAB on Oct 18 and mated to the STS-44 stack on Oct 19. It is due to be rolled out to the pad on Oct 23. Launch is due next month to place an early warning satellite in orbit. The Mir/Kvant/Sofora/Kvant-2/Kristall/Soyuz TM-13/Progress M-10 complex continues in orbit with crew Aleksandr Volkov and Sergey Krikalyov. The Soyuz TM-13 ferry was launched at 0559UT on Oct 2 and docked at the front Mir port at 0739UT on Oct 4. Crew Volkov, Aubakirov and Viehbock joined Artsebarskiy and Krikalyov. Late on Oct 9, Artsebarskiy, Aubakirov and Viehbock transferred to Soyuz TM-12 and undocked from the rear Kvant port, landing in Kazakhstan at 0412 UT on Oct 10. At 0001UT on Oct 15, Volkov and Krikalyov undocked from the front port in Soyuz TM-13 and flew around the station to inspect it, docking at the rear Kvant port at 0145 UT to test its new docking antenna. The robot cargo ship Progress M-10 was launched around 0010UT on Oct 17 and docked with Mir, presumably on the front port, on about Oct 20 or so. When Krikalyov lands in Soyuz TM-13 around Mar 24 or so next year, he has a chance of beating Yuriy Romanenko by a few hours for second place in the cumulative space experience rankings - Musa Manarov holds the record at 540 days, while Romanenko has 430 days. A Foton commercial materials processing satellite was launched on Oct 4 from Plesetsk in Russia. It will stay in orbit for a few weeks and be recovered in Kazakhstan. It is based on the Vostok spaceship bus. Kosmos-2163, an imaging military intelligence satellite, was launched from Baykonur in Kazakhstan on Oct 9 by a Soyuz rocket. Kosmos-2164 was launched by the small R-14 Kosmos rocket from Plesetsk on Oct 10. It is a rare type of military satellite, probably for electronic monitoring of some kind. Only four have been launched over a 17 year period; two have reentered. The launch dates and orbits of the four satellites are listed below: JCM-ID Name Launch Reentry Orb km x km x deg MMB1 Kosmos-687 1974 Oct 11-1978 286x698x74 MMB2 Kosmos-822 1976 May 28-1978 280x711x74 MMB3 Kosmos-1868 1987 Jul 14- 287x708x74 MMB4 Kosmos-2164 1991 Oct 10- 285x704x74 ___________________________________ |Current STS status: | |Orbiters | | | |OV-102 Columbia Palmdale | |OV-103 Discovery OPF Bay 3 | |OV-104 Atlantis VAB Bay 3 | |OV-105 Endeavour OPF Bay 1 | | | |ML/ET/SRB stacks | | | |ML1/STS-44/ET/OV-104 VAB Bay 3 | |ML2 | |ML3?/STS-42 VAB Bay 1 | ----------------------------------- N.B. Information in this report is obtained from public sources and does not reflect the official views of NASA. .-----------------------------------------------------------------------------. | Jonathan McDowell | phone : (205)544-7724 | | Space Science Lab ES65 | | | NASA Marshall Space Flight Center | | | Huntsville AL 35812 | inter : mcdowell@xanth.msfc.nasa.gov | | USA | | '-----------------------------------------------------------------------------'