наноспутники – Electron – Mahia – 21.01.2018, 01:43 UTC

Автор che wi, 29.11.2017 20:31:04

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tnt22

Цитировать Jonathan McDowell‏Подлинная учетная запись @planet4589 20 мин. назад

Electron's payload today is @planetlabs Dove 0F1C ("Dove Pioneer" ) and two @spireglobal Lemur-2 sats whose names are not yet public.

4 мин. назад

The two Lemur cubesats on Electron. The first presumably named after @tallhamn. Second perhaps named after Spire/Glasgow's Richard Marshall.
Цитировать Spire‏ @SpireGlobal 12 мин. назад

LEMUR2-TALLHAMN-ATC and LEMUR2-MARSHALL

Василий Ратников

Интересно что деньги карман не жгут у новозеландцев, после первого полу-успешного пуска они набрали телеметрии столько что больше чем полгода вносили исправление, жаль не известно во что
в железо больше или в ПО.

видимо оба фактора сказывается
1) мало работников
2) мало опыта, первый пуск показал что доделывать и доделывать.

Чебурашка

Да ладно, вон Элон наш Маск первых три Флакона завалил и ничего.

Василий Ратников

Чебурашка, так и я про то. Полностью согласен.

лично я очень болею за парней, ибо только такие как они смогут продвинуть космос
пока он в руках жирных тупых генералов и чиновников космосу капец.

tnt22

ЦитироватьRocket Lab - Still Testing - Launch Attempt 12/12/2017

Rocket Lab

Трансляция началась 11 часов назад
(31:35)

tnt22

Цитировать Rocket Lab‏Подлинная учетная запись @RocketLab 36 мин назад

Analysis of yesterday's launch attempt is complete. Launch was aborted due to rising liquid oxygen temperatures - the result of a LOx chilldown bleed schedule not compatible with the warm conditions of the day. The fix is simple.

Next attempt tomorrow! #StillTesting

tnt22

Цитировать Rocket Lab‏Подлинная учетная запись @RocketLab 40 мин назад

Today's #StillTesting launch attempt is currently targeted between 14:30-18:30 NZDT (1:30-5:30 UTC). Keeping an eye on weather. Updates on launch time to follow.

tnt22


tnt22

Цитировать Spaceflight Now‏ @SpaceflightNow 42 сек. назад

Rocket Lab begins new countdown with fix in place for propulsion system glitch that aborted a launch countdown two days ago. Liftoff from New Zealand is set during a four-hour window opening at 8:30pm EST tonight (0130 GMT Thursday). Details: https://spaceflightnow.com/2017/12/13/rocket-lab-begins-new-countdown-with-fix-for-propulsion-system-glitch/ ...

tnt22

https://spaceflightnow.com/2017/12/13/rocket-lab-begins-new-countdown-with-fix-for-propulsion-system-glitch/
ЦитироватьRocket Lab begins new countdown with fix for propulsion system glitch
December 13, 2017 Stephen Clark


The 55-foot-tall (17-meter) Electron rocket was raised vertical again on its launch pad in New Zealand ahead of a launch attempt Wednesday (U.S. time). Credit: Rocket Lab

With a fix in place for a propulsion system alarm that cut short a countdown in the final seconds Monday, U.S. time, Rocket Lab is readying an Electron rocket for another try in a window opening at 8:30 p.m. EST Wednesday (0130 GMT Tuesday) to begin a test flight aiming to deliver three small commercial CubeSats to orbit from a remote New Zealand launch pad.
Спойлер
Peter Beck, founder of the U.S.-New Zealand rocket company, said engineers have identified the problem that prevented liftoff on the Electron rocket's last launch attempt on Tuesday afternoon in New Zealand, or Monday night, U.S. time.

Liquid oxygen feeding into one of the Electron booster's nine Rutherford engines was too warm, and the computer-controlled countdown sequencer automatically ordered an abort at T-minus 2 seconds, moments after the engines ignited at Launch Complex 1, a commercial base on the east coast of New Zealand's North Island.

Liquid oxygen valves leading into the Rutherford engines are opened during the final minutes of an Electron countdown, allowing the super-cold fluid chilled to approximately minus 300 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 184 degrees Celsius) to flow through propulsion system. The "chilldown" procedure ensures the engine components are properly conditioned for start-up.

"We send LOX (liquid oxygen) through the engine to cool the engine as any crogenic engine does," Beck told Spaceflight Now in a phone interview. "The conditions of the day were a lot warmer than we've ever experienced, and basically we need to increase the duration of the chilldown schedule, or the bleed schedule. We're basically bleeding liquid oxygen through the vehicle, through the engines, to chill the engines up.

"While they were within our operational limits, on a test flight we have the bounds pulled right in, so it exceeded one of the bounds on the temperature. So as the engine started, it wasn't happy with the LOX temperature and it shut the engines down," he said.

On the next countdown, programmers have reworked the sequence to start the chilldown procedure earlier.

"It's as simple as that," Beck said.

The next four-hour launch opportunity opens at 8:30 p.m. EST Wednesday (0130 GMT; 2:30 p.m. New Zealand time Thursday). Rocket Lab has a broader launch period extending through Dec. 17 pre-approved by New Zealand airspace authorities and the Federal Aviation Administration, which has regulatory oversight of Electron launch operations because Rocket Lab is headquartered in Southern California.

Beck said Rocket Lab's launch team has rehearsed a last-second abort, but Monday's countdown was the first time the practice was put into action.

"When you get down to two seconds and engine ignition, of course there's a lot of excitement in the room at that point, but the vehicle is very advanced, with its checking and instrumentation, and the electric turbopumps really enable this kind of thing to occur," Beck said in a phone interview from Rocket Lab's manufacturing center in Auckland.

The Rutherford engines, developed and produced in-house at Rocket Lab, burn kerosene and liquid oxygen propellants to generate nearly 4,000 pounds of thrust at sea level — and higher power at high altitude. Their 3D-printed pumps are driven by battery-powered electric motors, not gas-driven turbopumps used on large rocket engines.

"The sort of fidelity we have with those is very good," Beck said of the electric pumps. "On a traditional launch vehicle, its quite a major (deal) to have an ignition and then be prepared for the next day. For us, because of the electric turbopump,s we just shut down, we do an engine purge, and we're ready to go."

Weather at the New Zealand launch base, owned an operated by Rocket Lab, will be monitored throughout the day as the launch team prepares for the opening of next launch window.

"We are keeping an eye on the weather conditions," Beck said in an interview. "We don't have as good of a day as we did (Monday, U.S. time), but the day is certainly good enough to go for a launch attempt."

Beck is optimistic the launch can occur before pre-approved launch period closes Dec. 17 (New Zealand time), but officials could extend the period or negotiate a new window if conditions don't allow it.

"We made it through all of the auto sequence and terminal count ,and everything on the vehicle was green, so we're pretty hopeful we'll get it off before the end of the window."

The two-stage Electron rocket will head south from its launch pad on Mahia Peninsula, targeting deployment of three CubeSats provided by two California-based companies — Spire and Planet — in a polar-type orbit ranging between 186 and 310 miles (300-500 kilometers) above Earth.

It will be the second flight of an Electron rocket after a May 25 test launch reached space, but faltered before it attained the speed required to enter orbit.

Rocket Lab blamed a programming error in ground tracking equipment for the vehicle's inability to each orbit. The malfunction caused range safety officers to lose track of the rocket, and they followed procedures to send a termination command to the booster.

The rocket was performing well up to that point around four minutes after liftoff, officials said. The first stage burned as planned for two-and-a-half minutes, and the second stage's modified Rutherford engine ignited as designed.

No payloads were aboard the May 25 test flight.

Rocket Lab officials hope the second mission, which it calls "Still Testing," will prove out the rest of the Electron rocket's systems through the remainder of the second stage burn, and then demonstrate the launcher's ability to release payloads in orbit.

Backed by venture capital funds in the United States and New Zealand, along with strategic financial investments from Lockheed Martin and the government of New Zealand, Rocket Lab designed the Electron rocket to place up to 225 pounds (150 kilograms) of payload into a sun-synchronous polar orbit, filling a niche in the commercial launch market that analysts say is currently under-addressed.

An Electron launch sells for around $4.9 million, according to Rocket Lab.
[свернуть]

tnt22

Адрес трансляции пуска на 2017-12-14 (UTC)

Цитироватьyoutube.com/watch?v=RqpCFDQLWrE


tnt22

Цитировать Stephen Clark‏ @StephenClark1 2 мин назад

Peter Beck of Rocket Lab tells me a fix is in place for tonight's launch attempt to avoid another last-second abort. Liquid oxygen temps were too warm in one of the Electron's engines, so chilldown will begin a bit earlier in the terminal countdown. ...

tnt22

Цитировать Rocket Lab‏Подлинная учетная запись @RocketLab 10 мин назад

Currently holding while the team monitors upper level winds. #StillTesting
Цитировать12/14/2017 03:38

Rocket Lab reports the countdown is holding to wait for more favorable upper level winds. Launch is not expected to occur at the opening of today's four-hour window, which extends until 12:30 a.m. EST (0530 GMT; 6:30 p.m. New Zealand time).

tnt22

Цитировать Rocket Lab‏Подлинная учетная запись @RocketLab 4 мин. назад

#StillTesting launch attempt waived off for the day due to increasing upper level winds. Next attempt tomorrow, pending optimal weather!

tnt22

Цитировать Spaceflight Now‏ @SpaceflightNow 2 мин. назад

Rocket Lab has scrubbed today's launch attempt due to unfavorable upper level winds over the Electron rocket's New Zealand launch pad. Next attempt is set for no earlier than Thursday night (U.S. time). https://spaceflightnow.com/2017/12/10/electron-still-testing-mission-status-center/ ...

tnt22

Цитировать12/14/2017 06:36

Here is the statement from Rocket Lab on the status of the Electron test flight, which has been rescheduled for no earlier than 8:30 p.m. EST Thursday night (0130 GMT; 2:30 p.m. New Zealand time Friday):
ЦитироватьRocket Lab has made the decision to wave off today's test launch attempt of the Electron rocket due to high upper level winds.

The day opened as a no-go for launch due to high shear winds, however initial data indicated weather conditions could improve slightly to allow for a launch attempt as the day progressed.

Shortly prior to the daily launch window opening at 14:30 NZDT (1:30 UTC), weather data indicated core jet stream wind speeds would have violated conservative launch criteria set for a test flight. Parameters will be opened to allow for higher wind tolerances once commercial flights begin.

Rocket Lab is currently targeting no earlier than 14:30, Friday 15 December NZDT (1:30 UTC) for the next launch attempt, while continuing to monitor weather conditions. The 'Still Testing' launch window remains open until and including December 17 NZDT.

tnt22

Цитировать Planet‏Подлинная учетная запись @planetlabs 3 ч. назад
 
Planet's view of Launch Complex-1 as @RocketLab readies for today's #StillTesting launch attempt with our Dove Pioneer aboard. Follow @RocketLab for updates.

tnt22

#77
:oops:
Продолжают мониторить высотные ветра. Время сообщат допонительно...

tnt22

Цитировать Rocket Lab‏Подлинная учетная запись @RocketLab 14 мин назад

Today's launch attempt has been scrubbed following the identification of a power fault during ground checkouts. Team will work the issue tomorrow before a new target launch time is determined in coming days.

tnt22