lundi 9 juin 2014

Progress M-21M completed flight











ROSCOSMOS - Russian Vehicles patch.

09.06.2014

An unpiloted Russian Progress cargo spacecraft undocked from the International Space Station Monday, completing its second and final undocking from the station since arriving in late November 2013.

The ISS Progress 53 resupply craft undocked from the aft port of the Zvezda service module at 9:29 a.m. EDT as the station orbited over Mongolia.


Image above: The ISS Progress 53 cargo ship can be seen in the distance following its undocking from the International Space Station. Another Progress and a Soyuz spacecraft, both docked to the station, can be seen on the right. Image Credit: NASA TV.

From a window in the Russian segment of the station, Expedition 40 Flight Engineer Alexander Skvortsov photographed the departing Progress cargo ship as it began a 15-second separation burn to move a safe distance away from the orbiting complex. 

A 3-minute, 16-second deorbit burn beginning at 12:34 p.m. slowed the Progress for its destructive re-entry in the Earth’s atmosphere over the Pacific Ocean less than an hour later. Progress resupply ships are not designed to be recovered, so, like its predecessors, Progress 53 was refilled with trash and station discards after its original cargo was unloaded by the station crew.

Progress 53 delivered 2.9 tons of food, fuel and supplies when it first arrived at the station on Nov. 29, following a flight that included a “fly-by” of the station two days earlier to test revamped Kurs automated rendezvous system hardware.  Because of a technical glitch unrelated to the new Kurs system, the Nov. 29 approach and docking of the Progress was controlled manually by the station’s crew using TORU, the Telerobotically Operated Rendezvous Unit.

To complete the testing of the Kurs-NA rendezvous hardware and its associated software, Progress 53 undocked from Zvezda on April 23 and successfully performed an automated docking to that port two days later. The enhanced Kurs system will be incorporated into future Progress vehicles to reduce weight by eliminating several navigational antennas, thus enabling the Progress to carry additional supplies to the station.

The final departure of Progress 53 clears the Zvezda docking port for the arrival in August of the European Space Agency’s fifth Automated Transfer Vehicle, ATV-5. Named for the Belgian physicist and astronomer Georges Lemaitre, the ATV-5 is scheduled for launch from Kourou, French Guiana, on an Ariane 5 rocket in late July.


Image above: A camera on the departing ISS Progress 53 cargo craft captured this view of the International Space Station. Image Credit: NASA TV.

In addition to monitoring the departure of Progress 53, the station’s six-person Expedition 40 crew supported a variety of experiments that can be conducted only in a microgravity environment and continued preparations for next week’s spacewalk.

June 9, 2014 at 21 hours 23 minutes Moscow time in a predetermined area of ​​the South Pacific is made of non-combustible residues flooding cargo vehicle (THC) Progress M-21M.

In 20 hours 34 minutes Moscow time in accordance with the program laid down in the ship's on-board computer specialists Mission Control Center (MCC) FSUE TsNIIMash on "space truck" was included on the braking propulsion, and then began a controlled reduction of THC from orbit.

ROSCOSMOS Press Release: http://www.federalspace.ru/20673/ and http://www.federalspace.ru/20674/

Image, Text, Credits: Roscosmos press service / ROSCOSMOS / NASA / NASA TV / Translation: Orbiter.ch Aerospace.

Best regards, Orbiter.ch