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Spektr-R

Spektr-R[6] (part of RadioAstron program) (Russian: Спеkтр-P) was a Russian scientific satellite with a 10 m (33 ft) radio telescope on board. It was launched on 18 July 2011[7] on a Zenit-3F launcher from Baikonur Cosmodrome, and was designed to perform research on the structure and dynamics of radio sources within and beyond the Milky Way. Together with some of the largest ground-based radio telescopes, the Spektr-R formed interferometric baselines extending up to 350,000 km (220,000 mi).

Spektr-R
Спектр-Р
Spektr-R at the integration and test complex of Launch Pad No.31, the Baikonur Space Center in July 2011
NamesRadioAstron
Mission typeRadio telescope
OperatorRussian Astro Space Center
COSPAR ID2011-037A
SATCAT no.37755
Websitehttp://www.asc.rssi.ru/radioastron/
Mission durationPlanned: 5 years
Achieved: 7 years, 10 months, 11 days
Spacecraft properties
BusNavigator[1]
ManufacturerNPO Lavochkin
Launch mass3,660 kg (8,069 lb)[1]
Payload mass2,500 kg (5,512 lb)[1]
Start of mission
Launch date18 July 2011, 02:31 (2011-07-18UTC02:31) UTC[2]
RocketZenit-3F[3][4]
Launch siteBaikonur Cosmodrome Pad 45/1[2]
ContractorRoscosmos
End of mission
DisposalEquipment failure
Declared30 May 2019
Last contact11 January 2019
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric
RegimeHighly elliptical
Semi-major axis180,974.7 km (112,452 mi)
Eccentricity0.905900
Perigee altitude10,651.6 km (6,619 mi)
Apogee altitude338,541.5 km (210,360 mi)
Inclination42.46°
Period12769.93 min
RAAN67.28°
Argument of perigee244.85°
Mean anomaly3.07°
Mean motion0.1126 rev/day
Epoch24 February 2016, 23:21:29 UTC[5]
Revolution no.197
Main telescope
Diameter10 m (33 ft)[1]
Focal length4.22 m (13.8 ft)[1]
Wavelengths92, 18, 6, 1.3 cm[1]
Spektr program
 

On 11 January 2019, the spacecraft stopped responding to ground control, but its science payload was described as "operational". The mission never recovered from the January 2019 incident, and the mission was declared finished (and spacecraft operations ended) on 30 May 2019.

Overview Edit

The Spektr-R project was funded by the Astro Space Center of Russia, and was launched into Earth orbit on 18 July 2011,[3] with a perigee of 10,000 km (6,200 mi) and an apogee of 390,000 km (240,000 mi), about 700 times the orbital height of the Hubble Space Telescope at its highest point and 20 times at its lowest.[8][9] In comparison, the average distance from Earth to the Moon is 384,400 km (238,900 mi).[10] As of 2018, the satellite has a much more stable orbit with a perigee of 57,000 km (35,000 mi) and an apogee of 320,000 km (200,000 mi), with its orbit no longer intersecting the Moon's orbit and being stable for possibly hundreds or even thousands of years.

The main scientific goal of the mission was the study of astronomical objects with an angular resolution up to a few millionths of an arcsecond. This was accomplished by using the satellite in conjunction with ground-based observatories and interferometry techniques.[3] Another purpose of the project was to develop an understanding of fundamental issues of astrophysics and cosmology. This included star formations, the structure of galaxies, interstellar space, black holes and dark matter.

Spektr-R was one of the instruments in the RadioAstron program, an international network of observatories led by the Astro Space Center of the Lebedev Physical Institute.[8]

The telescope was intended for radio-astrophysical observations of extragalactic objects with ultra-high resolution, as well as researching of characteristics of near-Earth and interplanetary plasma. The very high angular resolving power was achieved in conjunction with a ground-based system of radio-telescopes and interferometrical methods, operating at wavelengths of 1.35–6.0, 18.0 and 92.0 cm.[11] Once in space, the flower-like main dish was to open its 27 'petals' within 30 minutes.[citation needed]

There was a science payload of opportunity on board, PLASMA-F, which consists of four instruments to observe solar wind and the outer magnetosphere. These instruments are the energetic particle spectrometer MEP-2, the magnetometer MMFF, the solar wind monitor BMSW, and the data collection and processing unit SSNI-2.[12]

At launch the mass of the spacecraft was 3,660 kg (8,070 lb). It was launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome on 18 July 2011 at 02:31 UTC by a Zenit-3F launch vehicle, which is composed of a Zenit-2M with a Fregat-SB upper stage.[3][4]

On 11 January 2019, the spacecraft stopped responding to ground control. It was unknown whether the issue could be fixed, or whether the spacecraft's mission would be ended.[13] With Spektr-R's status unknown and the problems hitting the Mikhailo Lomonosov satellite, the Russian space program had no operational space observatories as of 12 January 2019. This changed with the launch of the Spektr-RG satellite in July 2019.

The mission was declared as finished on 30 May 2019.[14]

The external tank of the Fregat upper stage that delivered the Spektr-R observatory into orbit exploded on May 8, 2020, generating at least 65 trackable debris in orbit around Earth.[15]

History of the project Edit

At the beginning of the 1980s, one of the USSR's leading developers of scientific space probes had completed a preliminary design of revolutionary, new-generation spacecraft, 1F and 2F. The main purpose of Spektr was to develop a common platform that could be used for future deep-space missions.

NPO Lavochkin hoped to use the designs of the 1F as the standard design for space telescopes. In 1982, NPO Lavochkin had completed technical blueprints for RadioAstron, a space-based radio telescope. The expectation was that the 1F and 2F spacecraft would follow the expectations of the RadioAstron mission (also known as Astron-2).

Early on, many criticized the 1F platform for its questionable astrophysics missions, even when compared to the older 4V spacecraft bus. Although the attitude control system of the 1F seemed to have little issues navigating planetary probes, its accuracy was much below the standard requirements for a high-precision telescope. To add to 1F's technical issues, the spacecraft seemed to lack electrically driven fly-wheels, which critics believed would have increased its stabilization in space. The spacecraft also failed to have a moveable solar panel system, which could track the position of the Sun without requiring the entire satellite to reposition, eventually disrupting the observations process.

On 1 August 1983, VPK, the Soviet Military Industrial Commission commissioned an official decision (number 274) titled, "On works for creation of automated interplanetary vehicles for the exploration of planets of the Solar System, the Moon and cosmic space". This document outlined a new impetus for the development of satellites. The new technical proposals submitted in mid-1984 included a gamma-ray telescope designated to register radio waves in the millimetre range. Both of these satellites incorporated rotating solar panels, a highly sensitive star-tracking operating system and fly wheels.

By the end of the 1980s, NPO Lavochkin Designer General, Vyacheslav Kovtunenko (ru), proposed to design all future astrophysics satellites on the current Oko-1 spacecraft model, designed originally to track incoming ballistic missiles. According to this plan, Oko-1 (a missile-watching infrared telescope) would eventually be replaced with scientific instruments where the satellite would be pointed towards space rather than Earth.

Observing techniques Edit

Using a technique called very-long-baseline interferometry, it was anticipated that ground telescopes in Australia, Chile, China, India, Japan, Korea, Mexico, Russia, South Africa, Ukraine and the United States would jointly make observations with the RadioAstron spacecraft.

 
A selection of telescopes operating at wavelengths across the electromagnetic spectrum

The RadioAstron satellite's main 10-metre radio telescope would communicate in four different bands of radio waves with the international ground telescopes. It can also locate sources from two frequencies simultaneously. The Spektr-R was also planned to include a secondary BMSV within the Plazma-F experiment, the goal of which was to measure the directions and intensity of solar wind. In May 2011, the news agency RIA Novosti reported that the BMSV instrument would indeed be on board. It was also reported that the BMSV would carry a micrometeoroid counter made in Germany.

The RadioAstron was expected to extend into a highly elliptical orbit in the Fregat state of the Zenit rocket's launch. Spektr-R's closest point (perigee) would be 500 kilometres (310 mi) above the Earth's surface, with its apogee 340,000 kilometres (210,000 mi) away. The operational orbit would last at least nine years, with the RadioAstron never being in the Earth's shadow for more than two hours.

With its apogee as far as the orbit of the Moon, Spektr-R could be considered a deep-space mission. In fact, the gravitational pull of the Moon was expected to fluctuate the satellite's orbit in three-year cycles, with its apogee travelling between 265,000 and 360,000 kilometres (220,000 mi) from Earth and its perigee between 400 and 65,000 kilometres (250 and 40,390 mi). Each orbit would take RadioAstron around eight to nine days. This drift would vastly augment the telescope's range of vision. It was estimated that the satellite would have upwards of 80% of its potential targets within view at any one point in its orbit. The first 45 days of Spektr-R's orbit were scheduled to consist of engineering commissioning, that is, the launch of the main antenna, various systems checks and communications tests.

Spektr-R's tracking was to be handled by the RT-22 radio telescope in Pushchino, Russia. Flight control would be operated by ground stations in Medvezhi Ozera near Moscow and Ussuriysk in Russia's Far East. Other Spektr-R joint observations would be handled by ground telescopes in Arecibo, Badary, Effelsberg, Green Bank, Medicina, Noto, Svetloe, Zelenchukskaya and Westerbork.

The Spektr-R project was led by the Russian Academy of Sciences's Astro Space Center of the Lebedev Physics Institute. The radio receivers on Spektr-R were to be built in India and Australia. In earlier plans, two additional receivers were to be provided by firms under contract with the European VLBI Consortium, the EVN. These additional payloads were eventually cancelled, with the project citing old age. Similar Russian materials replaced the Indian and Australian instruments.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f "RadioAstron User Handbook" (PDF). RadioAstron Science and Technical Operations Group. 29 July 2015. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  2. ^ a b [The launch of the Russian scientific spacecraft "Spektr-R" successfully carried out from Baikonur]. Roscosmos. 18 July 2011. Archived from the original on 21 September 2015. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  3. ^ a b c d Clark, Stephen (18 July 2011). "Russian satellite on mission to peer inside black holes". Spaceflight Now. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  4. ^ a b Graham, William (8 November 2011). "Russian Zenit-2 launches Fobos-Grunt – Battle on to save mission". NASA Spaceflight. Retrieved 1 August 2015.
  5. ^ "Spektr-R – Orbit". Heavens Above. 19 February 2016. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  6. ^ Zak, Anatoly. "Spektr-R Radioastron". RussianSpaceWeb. Retrieved 15 August 2011.
  7. ^ Woollacott, Emma (19 July 2011). . TG Daily. Archived from the original on 15 July 2018. Retrieved 19 July 2011.
  8. ^ a b "Status of the RadioAstron project development". Russian Space Science Internet. Russian Space Research Institute. Retrieved 28 February 2008.
  9. ^ "RadioAstron Mission – Orbit". Russian Space Science Internet. Russian Space Research Institute. Retrieved 28 February 2008.
  10. ^ . Solar System Exploration. NASA. 10 May 2011. Archived from the original on 7 November 2011. Retrieved 6 November 2011.
  11. ^ . Roscosmos. Archived from the original on 15 August 2013. Retrieved 18 July 2011.
  12. ^ Zelenyi, L. M.; Zastenker, G. N.; Petrukovich, A. A.; et al. (March 2013). "Plasma-F experiment onboard the Spectr-R satellite". Cosmic Research. 51 (2): 73–77. Bibcode:2013CosRe..51...73Z. doi:10.1134/S0010952513020093. S2CID 121404840.
  13. ^ "Spektr-R: Russia's only space telescope 'not responding'". BBC News. 12 January 2019.
  14. ^ "Новости. "Спектр-Р": миссия закончена, обработка данных продолжается".
  15. ^ "Spektr-R mission".

External links Edit

  • RadioAstron website

spektr, part, radioastron, program, russian, Спеkтр, russian, scientific, satellite, with, radio, telescope, board, launched, july, 2011, zenit, launcher, from, baikonur, cosmodrome, designed, perform, research, structure, dynamics, radio, sources, within, bey. Spektr R 6 part of RadioAstron program Russian Spektr P was a Russian scientific satellite with a 10 m 33 ft radio telescope on board It was launched on 18 July 2011 7 on a Zenit 3F launcher from Baikonur Cosmodrome and was designed to perform research on the structure and dynamics of radio sources within and beyond the Milky Way Together with some of the largest ground based radio telescopes the Spektr R formed interferometric baselines extending up to 350 000 km 220 000 mi Spektr R Spektr RSpektr R at the integration and test complex of Launch Pad No 31 the Baikonur Space Center in July 2011NamesRadioAstronMission typeRadio telescopeOperatorRussian Astro Space CenterCOSPAR ID2011 037ASATCAT no 37755Websitehttp www asc rssi ru radioastron Mission durationPlanned 5 years Achieved 7 years 10 months 11 daysSpacecraft propertiesBusNavigator 1 ManufacturerNPO LavochkinLaunch mass3 660 kg 8 069 lb 1 Payload mass2 500 kg 5 512 lb 1 Start of missionLaunch date18 July 2011 02 31 2011 07 18UTC02 31 UTC 2 RocketZenit 3F 3 4 Launch siteBaikonur Cosmodrome Pad 45 1 2 ContractorRoscosmosEnd of missionDisposalEquipment failureDeclared30 May 2019Last contact11 January 2019Orbital parametersReference systemGeocentricRegimeHighly ellipticalSemi major axis180 974 7 km 112 452 mi Eccentricity0 905900Perigee altitude10 651 6 km 6 619 mi Apogee altitude338 541 5 km 210 360 mi Inclination42 46 Period12769 93 minRAAN67 28 Argument of perigee244 85 Mean anomaly3 07 Mean motion0 1126 rev dayEpoch24 February 2016 23 21 29 UTC 5 Revolution no 197Main telescopeDiameter10 m 33 ft 1 Focal length4 22 m 13 8 ft 1 Wavelengths92 18 6 1 3 cm 1 Spektr programSpektr RG On 11 January 2019 the spacecraft stopped responding to ground control but its science payload was described as operational The mission never recovered from the January 2019 incident and the mission was declared finished and spacecraft operations ended on 30 May 2019 Contents 1 Overview 2 History of the project 3 Observing techniques 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksOverview EditThe Spektr R project was funded by the Astro Space Center of Russia and was launched into Earth orbit on 18 July 2011 3 with a perigee of 10 000 km 6 200 mi and an apogee of 390 000 km 240 000 mi about 700 times the orbital height of the Hubble Space Telescope at its highest point and 20 times at its lowest 8 9 In comparison the average distance from Earth to the Moon is 384 400 km 238 900 mi 10 As of 2018 the satellite has a much more stable orbit with a perigee of 57 000 km 35 000 mi and an apogee of 320 000 km 200 000 mi with its orbit no longer intersecting the Moon s orbit and being stable for possibly hundreds or even thousands of years The main scientific goal of the mission was the study of astronomical objects with an angular resolution up to a few millionths of an arcsecond This was accomplished by using the satellite in conjunction with ground based observatories and interferometry techniques 3 Another purpose of the project was to develop an understanding of fundamental issues of astrophysics and cosmology This included star formations the structure of galaxies interstellar space black holes and dark matter Spektr R was one of the instruments in the RadioAstron program an international network of observatories led by the Astro Space Center of the Lebedev Physical Institute 8 The telescope was intended for radio astrophysical observations of extragalactic objects with ultra high resolution as well as researching of characteristics of near Earth and interplanetary plasma The very high angular resolving power was achieved in conjunction with a ground based system of radio telescopes and interferometrical methods operating at wavelengths of 1 35 6 0 18 0 and 92 0 cm 11 Once in space the flower like main dish was to open its 27 petals within 30 minutes citation needed There was a science payload of opportunity on board PLASMA F which consists of four instruments to observe solar wind and the outer magnetosphere These instruments are the energetic particle spectrometer MEP 2 the magnetometer MMFF the solar wind monitor BMSW and the data collection and processing unit SSNI 2 12 At launch the mass of the spacecraft was 3 660 kg 8 070 lb It was launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome on 18 July 2011 at 02 31 UTC by a Zenit 3F launch vehicle which is composed of a Zenit 2M with a Fregat SB upper stage 3 4 On 11 January 2019 the spacecraft stopped responding to ground control It was unknown whether the issue could be fixed or whether the spacecraft s mission would be ended 13 With Spektr R s status unknown and the problems hitting the Mikhailo Lomonosov satellite the Russian space program had no operational space observatories as of 12 January 2019 This changed with the launch of the Spektr RG satellite in July 2019 The mission was declared as finished on 30 May 2019 14 The external tank of the Fregat upper stage that delivered the Spektr R observatory into orbit exploded on May 8 2020 generating at least 65 trackable debris in orbit around Earth 15 History of the project EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message At the beginning of the 1980s one of the USSR s leading developers of scientific space probes had completed a preliminary design of revolutionary new generation spacecraft 1F and 2F The main purpose of Spektr was to develop a common platform that could be used for future deep space missions NPO Lavochkin hoped to use the designs of the 1F as the standard design for space telescopes In 1982 NPO Lavochkin had completed technical blueprints for RadioAstron a space based radio telescope The expectation was that the 1F and 2F spacecraft would follow the expectations of the RadioAstron mission also known as Astron 2 Early on many criticized the 1F platform for its questionable astrophysics missions even when compared to the older 4V spacecraft bus Although the attitude control system of the 1F seemed to have little issues navigating planetary probes its accuracy was much below the standard requirements for a high precision telescope To add to 1F s technical issues the spacecraft seemed to lack electrically driven fly wheels which critics believed would have increased its stabilization in space The spacecraft also failed to have a moveable solar panel system which could track the position of the Sun without requiring the entire satellite to reposition eventually disrupting the observations process On 1 August 1983 VPK the Soviet Military Industrial Commission commissioned an official decision number 274 titled On works for creation of automated interplanetary vehicles for the exploration of planets of the Solar System the Moon and cosmic space This document outlined a new impetus for the development of satellites The new technical proposals submitted in mid 1984 included a gamma ray telescope designated to register radio waves in the millimetre range Both of these satellites incorporated rotating solar panels a highly sensitive star tracking operating system and fly wheels By the end of the 1980s NPO Lavochkin Designer General Vyacheslav Kovtunenko ru proposed to design all future astrophysics satellites on the current Oko 1 spacecraft model designed originally to track incoming ballistic missiles According to this plan Oko 1 a missile watching infrared telescope would eventually be replaced with scientific instruments where the satellite would be pointed towards space rather than Earth Observing techniques EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Using a technique called very long baseline interferometry it was anticipated that ground telescopes in Australia Chile China India Japan Korea Mexico Russia South Africa Ukraine and the United States would jointly make observations with the RadioAstron spacecraft A selection of telescopes operating at wavelengths across the electromagnetic spectrumThe RadioAstron satellite s main 10 metre radio telescope would communicate in four different bands of radio waves with the international ground telescopes It can also locate sources from two frequencies simultaneously The Spektr R was also planned to include a secondary BMSV within the Plazma F experiment the goal of which was to measure the directions and intensity of solar wind In May 2011 the news agency RIA Novosti reported that the BMSV instrument would indeed be on board It was also reported that the BMSV would carry a micrometeoroid counter made in Germany The RadioAstron was expected to extend into a highly elliptical orbit in the Fregat state of the Zenit rocket s launch Spektr R s closest point perigee would be 500 kilometres 310 mi above the Earth s surface with its apogee 340 000 kilometres 210 000 mi away The operational orbit would last at least nine years with the RadioAstron never being in the Earth s shadow for more than two hours With its apogee as far as the orbit of the Moon Spektr R could be considered a deep space mission In fact the gravitational pull of the Moon was expected to fluctuate the satellite s orbit in three year cycles with its apogee travelling between 265 000 and 360 000 kilometres 220 000 mi from Earth and its perigee between 400 and 65 000 kilometres 250 and 40 390 mi Each orbit would take RadioAstron around eight to nine days This drift would vastly augment the telescope s range of vision It was estimated that the satellite would have upwards of 80 of its potential targets within view at any one point in its orbit The first 45 days of Spektr R s orbit were scheduled to consist of engineering commissioning that is the launch of the main antenna various systems checks and communications tests Spektr R s tracking was to be handled by the RT 22 radio telescope in Pushchino Russia Flight control would be operated by ground stations in Medvezhi Ozera near Moscow and Ussuriysk in Russia s Far East Other Spektr R joint observations would be handled by ground telescopes in Arecibo Badary Effelsberg Green Bank Medicina Noto Svetloe Zelenchukskaya and Westerbork The Spektr R project was led by the Russian Academy of Sciences s Astro Space Center of the Lebedev Physics Institute The radio receivers on Spektr R were to be built in India and Australia In earlier plans two additional receivers were to be provided by firms under contract with the European VLBI Consortium the EVN These additional payloads were eventually cancelled with the project citing old age Similar Russian materials replaced the Indian and Australian instruments See also Edit Spaceflight portalSpektr RG Spektr UV HALCAReferences Edit a b c d e f RadioAstron User Handbook PDF RadioAstron Science and Technical Operations Group 29 July 2015 Retrieved 1 August 2015 a b Zapusk rossijskogo nauchnogo kosmicheskogo apparata Spektr R uspeshno osushestvlen s Bajkonura The launch of the Russian scientific spacecraft Spektr R successfully carried out from Baikonur Roscosmos 18 July 2011 Archived from the original on 21 September 2015 Retrieved 1 August 2015 a b c d Clark Stephen 18 July 2011 Russian satellite on mission to peer inside black holes Spaceflight Now Retrieved 1 August 2015 a b Graham William 8 November 2011 Russian Zenit 2 launches Fobos Grunt Battle on to save mission NASA Spaceflight Retrieved 1 August 2015 Spektr R Orbit Heavens Above 19 February 2016 Retrieved 19 February 2016 Zak Anatoly Spektr R Radioastron RussianSpaceWeb Retrieved 15 August 2011 Woollacott Emma 19 July 2011 Russia launches biggest ever space telescope TG Daily Archived from the original on 15 July 2018 Retrieved 19 July 2011 a b Status of the RadioAstron project development Russian Space Science Internet Russian Space Research Institute Retrieved 28 February 2008 RadioAstron Mission Orbit Russian Space Science Internet Russian Space Research Institute Retrieved 28 February 2008 Earth s Moon Facts amp Figures Solar System Exploration NASA 10 May 2011 Archived from the original on 7 November 2011 Retrieved 6 November 2011 RadioAstron Roscosmos Archived from the original on 15 August 2013 Retrieved 18 July 2011 Zelenyi L M Zastenker G N Petrukovich A A et al March 2013 Plasma F experiment onboard the Spectr R satellite Cosmic Research 51 2 73 77 Bibcode 2013CosRe 51 73Z doi 10 1134 S0010952513020093 S2CID 121404840 Spektr R Russia s only space telescope not responding BBC News 12 January 2019 Novosti Spektr R missiya zakonchena obrabotka dannyh prodolzhaetsya Spektr R mission External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Spektr R RadioAstron website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Spektr R amp oldid 1169208111, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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