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Post Info TOPIC: Arabsat4A


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RE: Arabsat4A
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Perth stargazer Ray Palmer recalls the night in February last year when he briefly became astronomys hottest property.
The self-styled space artist was taking a trademark long-exposure shot of the night sky when by chance he became the only person to capture a space rocket exploding in orbit.
Alone and far from anywhere, he watched in wonder as a mysterious cloud of twinkling lights grew to the size of a full Moon in the sky.

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The explosion of a Russian rocket stage in space may have created as much debris, if not more, as the destruction of a satellite by China last month.
The rocket section - which contained fuel - exploded on 19 February, generating 1,111 pieces of debris which could threaten other spacecraft.
This space wreckage could remain in orbit for years, experts say.

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Initially thought to be related to the recent Themis launch, this object has been ID'd with the help of the US Air Force Space Surveillance System personnel, and turns out to be an exploding Breeze-M rocket body. They later detected over 500 individual pieces on radar!

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Today NORAD has added 1111 fragments from the break-up of the Briz-M and Arabsat-4A satellite.

ScrSav065
Expand (86kb, 630 x 390)

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BREEZE-M R/B
Period 274.13
Incl. 51.52
Apogee 14706
Perigee 495

TLE Data


BREEZE-M R/B
1 28944U 06006B 07051.71281544 .00000106 00000-0 15456-3 0 1986
2 28944 051.5172 212.2509 5083362 198.4402 133.0779 05.25304411 18752


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Arabsat4A Explosion
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A Briz-M rocket booster, catalogue number 28944, was launched atop a Russian Proton rocket on Feb. 28, 2006, carrying the Arabsat-4A communications satellite.
One year after, on Feb. 19, 2007, the Briz-M and satellite, for some unknown reason, the onboard fuel re-ignited as the pair orbited over Australia.
Gordon Garradd of New South Wales photographed the cloud of debris.

28944orbit

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RE: Arabsat4A
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The Russian State Commission has completed its investigation into the Proton M/Breeze M anomaly that left the Arabsat 4A satellite in the wrong orbit eight weeks ago, during a mission for International Launch Services (ILS).

The commission concluded that an anomaly in the oxidizer supply system caused the Breeze M upper stage main engine to shut down prematurely. Based on telemetry data, the most probable cause of the oxidizer supply interruption was a foreign particle that blocked a nozzle of the booster hydraulic pump.

Flight operations should be able to resume after corrective actions have been implemented, the commission stated. Implementation of such steps is expected by the end of May.

The launch of the Arabsat 4A satellite took place at 11:10 p.m. Moscow time Feb. 28 (2:10 a.m. March 1 at the Baikonur launch site). The Proton M launch vehicle inserted the space head unit (Breeze M upper stage with satellite) into the proper orbit, according to the mission profile.
At 5,536 seconds after liftoff, during the second burn of the Breeze M, an unplanned main engine shutdown occurred. In accordance with standard procedures, the flight control system produced an emergency command, and at 5,541 seconds after liftoff the spacecraft was separated from the upper stage, into an orbit of 51.5 degrees inclination, 14,679 km apogee altitude and 506 km perigee altitude.

The State Commission reviewed all possible failure scenarios based on telemetry data received from the Breeze M upper stage. To verify possible scenarios, various units have been tested in test stands, including test firing of the main engine.

The commission is developing corrective actions for additional inspection of the Breeze M and Breeze KM main engines, which are of the same type, to prevent recurrence of similar anomalies.
Concurrently, the ILS Failure Review Oversight Board will commence a series of meetings in Moscow. The FROB will review the final report and corrective action plan in accord with U.S. and Russian government technology control regulations, with a goal of completing its work by the end of May.

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According to the US Defence Department, the orbit of ArabSat 4A has not been able to be corrected and the satellite was re-entered into the Earths atmosphere to burn up over the South Pacific at 9:07 p.m. ET Thursday.

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An investigation into the Breeze-M upper stage of the Proton launch vehicle, following last week's failure to place the ArabSat-4A into its correct orbit, has found that the failure occurred when the Breeze-M upper stage shut down 200 seconds too early into its second burn of 1851 seconds.
The investigation is ongoing and expected to last a month.

A plan has been suggested to correct the ArabSat-4A orbit by a trip around the moon.

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The Arabsat communications satellite failed to reach its proper orbit following its launch from Kazakhstan on Tuesday night.
The Russian Federal Space Agency said on Wednesday that Arabsat 4 was the victim of a booster malfunction in the Russian Proton rocket that carried it into space.

The space agency concluded that Arabsat 4 was a lost cause.

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