Sunday, 9 December 2012

Launch of Russian communications satellite goes awry

MOSCOW: Russia failed to put a communications satellite into designated orbit on Sunday, in the latest setback for the once-pioneering space industry, officials said.

The latest mishap is believed to be linked to a malfunction in the Proton-M rocket’s Briz-M booster stage that earlier this year apparently led President Vladimir Putin to fire the chief of a key aerospace bureau.

“On December 9, during the placing of Yamal-402 satellite vehicle into designated orbit, the separation of the satellite vehicle occurred four minutes ahead of schedule,” Russia’s Roskosmos state space agency said in a statement.

The space agency added it had taken control of the satellite and was looking to fix the problem.

It said on Sunday that all the systems of the satellite were “functioning in a regular mode” and the next attempt to put the Yamal-402 into orbit would be made later on Sunday.

The satellite had been launched by a Proton-M carrier rocket from the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 1313 GMT on Saturday.

“The situation is unpleasant but not catastrophic,” a source in the space industry told the Interfax news agency, adding the satellite could still reach the designated orbit with the help of its own engines.

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