Showing posts with label Kourou. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kourou. Show all posts

Friday, July 27, 2012

ESA Lunar Lander still on target for 2018

Lunar Lander is a robotic explorer that will demonstrate key European technologies and conduct science experiments. The mission is a forerunner to future human and robotic exploration of the Moon and Mars. Like the SMART-1 program, the ESA Lunar Lander is intended to establish European expertise and encourage "strong international partnerships in exploration" [ESA].
HT: Jason Major, Universe Today

European Space Agency - After more than 30 years, the Moon is once again in the spotlight of space agencies worldwide, as a destination for both robotic missions and human explorers. Europe’s ambitions for lunar exploration begin with a lander on the Moon in 2018.

Plans call for launching the ESA Lunar Lander on board a newly designed Soyuz 2.1B, attached to a high-performance fregat upper stage, from the Russian launch facility adjacent to Europe's busy Guiana Space Centre at Kourou, French Guiana, near the equator on the Atlantic coast of South America. Utilizing a low energy transfer orbit, boosting the height of perigee in successive orbits, the Lunar Lander will rendezvous with the Moon and brake into a polar orbit.

Lunar Lander is a robotic explorer that will demonstrate key European technologies and conduct science experiments. The mission is a forerunner to future human and robotic exploration of the Moon and Mars. It will establish European expertise to allow strong international partnerships in exploration.

Lunar Lander’s primary goal is to demonstrate the advanced technologies needed to land precisely and safely. The spacecraft will find its landing site without human intervention, recognising and avoiding hazards such as craters and boulders autonomously. 

On the Moon, it will prove European technologies for surviving and working while exploring the environment around the landing site. The choice of the high rim of Shackleton crater, location of the Moon's south pole, should allow long periods of near-constant availability of solar energy.

Before operating more ambitious equipment and conducting human activities on the Moon, many questions need to be answered. How hazardous is lunar dust to equipment and astronauts? Does the Moon offer resources that could be used by future missions?


Lunar Lander will touch down near to the Moon’s south pole, an interesting location for future exploration missions, where no craft has landed before. The technologies developed to reach this site, together with a deeper understanding of this challenging environment, will equip Europe’s scientists and engineers for future cooperation on even more ambitious exploration missions.

Related Posts:
ESA: more about its Lunar Rover (March 16, 2008)
ESA input sought on multi-purpose lunar lander (March 2, 2009)
ESA demonstrates lunar life support system (June 6, 2009)
Astrium study of ESA NEXT lunar lander underway (June 10, 2009)
Russia comes to South America (June 18, 2009)
Remembering SMART-1 (September 17, 2009)
ESA: Fly us to the Moon's South Pole (March 31, 2010)
NEXT step for ESA's first lunar lander (September 16, 2010)
Scientific Preparations for Lunar Exploration Workshop (November 14, 2011)
Astrium tests ESA Lunar Lander thrusters (March 5, 2012)
ESA's MoonNEXT boosted by ATV development (April 30, 2012)

Monday, November 9, 2009

Soyuz on their way to Kourou

PhysOrg-AFP

A Russian rocket will next year for the first time blast off from a European launch pad in South America, officials said Saturday, as the first rockets headed for the site on board a ship.

"We are in line for the first launch in the second quarter of next year," the chief executive of French aerospace firm Arianespace Jean-Yves Le Gall told AFP.

Read the story HERE.

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Russia comes to South America


Construction of the new Soyuz launch facility at the Guiana Space Centre (Centre Spatial Guyanais – CSG), Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana. Wide-angle view of the almost-complete Soyuz launch system. The four primary support arms are shown in their closed position, when they form a support ring around the ‘waist’ of Soyuz to suspend the vehicle over its launch pad. Directly behind the two rear support arms is the set of umbilical masts that will service the Soyuz Block A core stage, its Block I third stage, the Fregat upper stage and the payload. Visible below in the launch table’s 15-metre diameter circular opening are four triangular guides that will be connected to the four strap-on boosters – providing stability for the suspended vehicle until liftoff. The two other arms extending into the opening carry electrical umbilicals for the Soyuz boosters and the Block A core stage. Credits: ESA / CNES / Arianespace / Optique vidéo du CSG - J. M. Guillon

Recent reports from the Paris Air Show hinted at a construction delay at Roscosmos' new Soyuz launch facility at "Europe's Spaceport" on the Atlantic coast in French Guiana.

Launching into orbit from the equator carries advantages not unlike Russia's centuries-long effort to gain an ice-free seaport. Those advantages should not be taken lightly.

Based on a report from the European Space Agency, Thursday, construction is obviously very far along, something made clear by the pictures accompanying.

Instead of launching from French Guiana in late 2009, as originally planned, Roscosmos now says Soyuz will begin launching, much closer to the equator and over water, in early 2010.

In the space business, that's not really much of a delay.

The immediate advantage to launching from near the equator is the huge reduction in energy needed to attain earth orbit.

Beginning at Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, very far inland, more than halfway to the North Pole, and where nearly every Russian orbital mission has launched since 1957 Soyuz is already clipping along even still, at a leisurely 323 meters per second eastward with the speed of Earth's rotation at 45° north latitude.

In the Americas, however, ESA's Spaceport in French Guyana is only 5.4° north of the equator, and ESA's Ariane V starts its flight already moving toward the east with the surface of the earth at 463 meters per second.

That extra 140 meters per second may not seem like much, though it makes a big difference in the amount of weight that the same booster can hoist into orbit. At $10,000 a kilogram this lowers costs in hauling up the same cargo and increases payload weight for identical boosters.

Another advantage is less obvious.

The Moon's orbital plain never comes closer than about 5° north or south of the Tropics of Cancer and Capricorn, where the Sun and ecliptic can still be precisely overhead.

But the surface of the Moon is never perpendicular to any booster while standing straight up at Cape Canaveral, and its orbital plain is never further North than Cuba.

Because the ecliptic is never directly over Kennedy Space Center, and never comes to its closest more than once each day, the difference has to be made up in energy used in off-plain maneuvers around the orbital nodes it shares with the Moon twice during each of a vehical's orbit, or more usually expends energy using something less than an efficient vector during a Moon-bound vehicle's boost to orbit from Cape Canaveral.

If your goal is orbit or the Moon, or beyond to nearly anywhere in this star system, the opportunities and highest effeciencies begin near the equator.

It's not hard to see why Russia is investing in the lifting of crew and cargo into orbit so close to the place where ESA has been launching payloads for more than a quarter century.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Russian facility at Kourou to be delayed

AFP The first launches by the veteran Russian rocket Soyuz and a new light rocket called Vega from Europe's space base will be postponed to 2010, the European Space Agency (ESA) said on Monday.

They had been scheduled to take place by the end of the year.

A workhorse of space, Soyuz is being added to ESA's launch pad at Kourou, French Guiana, to provide the agency with operational flexibility, to cope with medium-level payloads while the Ariane 5 rocket takes care of heavy payloads.

ESA Director General Jean-Jacques Dordain told reporters at the Paris Air Show that there were delays in a Russian-made mobile gantry that will be added to the launch pad.

"The mobile gantry should have been integrated now, meaning that the first launch of Soyuz from French Guiana will take place now in the first weeks of 2010 instead of the end of 2009," Dordain said.

Soyuz until now has only been launched from Plesetsk, northern Russia, and from Baikonur, in Kazakhstan, and has not used a gantry for support.

The version that will be used in Kourou will be a "Soyuz 2", able to hoist three tonnes into geostationary orbit, compared to 1.7 tonnes that can be launched from Baikonur.

Meanwhile, Dordain added there were delays in completing the testing of a new light rocket called Vega that will be the third component of the flexible launcher strategy.

Vega, with a payload capacity of 1.5 tonnes, is to be deployed from the launchpad of the old Ariane-1 rocket. ESA had hoped to have the rocket take its maiden flight by the end of 2009.

Details HERE.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Russia, ESA plan orbiting shipyard

European Space Agency and Roscosmos officials "want to create an international space shipyard in low orbit above the Earth," Rob Coppinger at FlightGlobal has reported.

The proposal is a response to the uncertain retirement of ISS after American support for the space station is still formally scheduled to end in 2016. The ESA-Russian orbiting platform would be used "to assemble manned spacecraft that could travel to Mars or the moon."

Roscosmos and ESA are already planning a Russian section for the European equatorial launch facility at Kourou in French Guyana.

Meanwhile some Members of Congress in the U.S. remain hopeful of extending support for ISS beyond 2016 though such funding may offset support for the Constellation program.

According to FoxNEWS, "NASA's plans for future manned trips to the moon involve some type of ship assembly in Earth's orbit, as do plans for any vessels capable of taking people to Mars."

"A majority of the world's major space agencies are expected to meet in June at the Hague, and the shipyard is expected to be on the agenda."

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

New Soyuz landing may be rocket cushioned

From RussianSpaceWeb.com via BBC, notional glimpse
of renovated Russian Soyuz terminal descent
cushioned by rockets and footpads

From Anatoly Zak (via BBC) Engineers are considering a rocket-powered landing system for the successor to Russia's Soyuz spacecraft.

If accepted, it would be the first time in history that a manned vehicle relied solely on rocket engines for touchdown.

Previous manned missions have landed on Earth using a parachute or, in the case of space shuttles, a pair of wings.

RKK Energia, Russia's prime developer of manned spacecraft, had to examine the feasibility of the rocket-powered landing as a result of conflicting requirements for the project set by the Russian government.

Currently, Russian cosmonauts are carried into orbit on the three-seat Soyuz capsule. Russia is developing the new craft as a replacement to this venerable spacecraft, which has been in service for more than four decades.

The Soyuz does use small solid propellant motors to soften its touchdown, but the ship's parachute plays the main role in providing the vehicle and crew with a safe landing.

New launch site: In 2007, Moscow took the momentous decision to build a new launch site in the nation's far east, hoping to end Russia's dependency on the spaceport in Baikonur, which, after the collapse of the Soviet Union, ended up in the newly independent republic of Kazakhstan.

The new site, which has been dubbed Vostochny, or simply "Eastern", will be located almost as far south as Baikonur - an important orbital mechanics factor which determines the cargo-carrying capacity of rockets.

(Increasing the cargo capacity even more would result from the Russian - ESA partnership calling for a devoted Russian launch facility on the equator at Kourou.)

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Europe expects busy year in space

Jonathan Amos, BBC News

Europe will launch two flagship space telescopes this year, and three satellites that will acquire key data about ice, gravity and soils on Earth.

European Space Agency boss Jean-Jacques Dordain set out his priorities for 2009 at a Paris briefing on Wednesday.

He said 2008's successes, which saw the Columbus science lab attached to the space station, were "exceptional".

"Last year was really an outstanding vintage," he added. "But there'll be no breathing space going forward."

Esa activity this year will witness the recruitment of new astronauts and the start of Soyuz launches from the European spaceport at Kourou in French Guiana.

The Soyuz initiative has required considerable investment at Kourou, to construct facilities that are a facsimile of those at the Russian rocket's traditional home of Baikonur, Kazakhstan.

IMAGE BBC NEWS: If all goes according to plan,
2009 will see the maiden launch of VEGA
Read more HERE.

Soyuz: The Russian rocket will start launching from Europe's Kourou spaceport. Because rockets launched close to the equator get a favourable "kick" from the Earth's rotation, Soyuz at Kourou will have increased capacity. In 2010, Soyuz will start launching operational Galileo satellites.

Vega: This is Europe's newest rocket. It is currently scheduled to make its maiden flight from Kourou in December. Vega will be used for smaller payloads that have struggled recently to find an available launcher. Vega is part of Europe's policy of having "guaranteed access" to space.

Frank De Winne: The Belgian astronaut will become the first European commander of the International Space Station. He will launch to the orbiting platform on a Soyuz in May. His tour of duty will last roughly six months. He will have a five-person crew under his charge.

Tuesday, January 6, 2009

ESA Soyuz Kourou launch in 2010?


Rob Coppinger - Hyperbola - Already delayed from 2008 to 2009 the European Space Agency (ESA) seems to be preparing for a possible delay into 2010 for the introduction of Arianespace/Starsem French Guiana Space Centre (CSG) operations of the Samara Space Centre Soyuz 2-1a rocket as the maiden launch slips to November or December this year, but ESA declines to confirm that end of 2009 target date as definite.
Read more HERE.

Friday, March 14, 2008

A Week in Space: Success Built on Failure

The Fountains of Enceladus

"Institutional memory is no luxury at NASA."
Joel Raupe
LUNAR PIONEER

The week in space saw demonstrations of astounding success, with stubbed toes and skinned knees here and there. Around Saturn, in low-Earth-orbit and here on the surface humans are building success on the shoulders of monumental failure.

Twentieth Century astronomer Harlow Shapley may have been wrong to disagree with Edmund Hubble’s theory that the Milky Way is yet another Galaxy, in a universe filled with similar “islands” in "the Great Debate" with Heber D. Curtis in 1920, but Shapley was prophetic in believing the quest for the stars would be a rugged one.

Planning for Failure:

At Langley Research Center NASA showed off an engineering mock up of an Orion engineering mock-up built to test launch failure escape systems. It evoked memories of similar Apollo mock-ups rolled out in 1961, even as Project Mercury was barely underway, and also memories also of Apollo 1 and the launch test Oxygen fire incinerating it's crew, Gus Grissom, Ed White and Roger Chaffee in 1967.

"Institutional Memory isn't a luxury with NASA. Failure to remember is far too expensive.

Last month Thomas D. Jones remembered his friends aboard Columbia five years ago when he wrote in Popular Science that “Orion will launch with a powerful escape motor that can rocket its crew away from a disintegrating booster. A conical crew cabin structure will protect the heat shield beneath it from a debris strike like the one that doomed Columbia.”

Institutional Memory isn't a luxury with NASA. Failure to remember is far too expensive, as is contingency planning that would give a soccer mom a brain cramp. The costly fire on the pad killing the crew of Apollo 1, and the Apollo 204 Investigation Board, led by future Apollo 8 commander Frank Borman, and the discovering of 20,000 design flaws in the Apollo/Saturn vehicles, saved future success for Apollo and nine visits by 27 people to lunar realm.

Of course, the pad fire would not have been prevented by a capsule escape system, a contingency never used in American manned spaceflight, but it does show contingency planning works. It works where failure is anticipated. Critical faults that did end up failing in the future appear always to be ones not planned for in contingency policy, but deadly failure always brought harsh light to systemic and mechanical flaws in need of being contingency planning priorities.

Capsule escape systems were never used during the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo missions, but early NASA officials were informed by the spectacular booster explosions on the pad and just after lift-off of unmanned vehicles before and after, just as they're reminded today by more recent failure. Thomas D. Jones' article in POPSCI shows a return to expendable boosters and “capsules” won't mean that Constellation will be uninformed by the space shuttle and the lessons of both Challenger and Columbia, perhaps in finally giving design and mission critics a voice equal to those of accountants and vendors, and their friends in Congress.

Working the Problem:

In low-Earth-orbit, STS-123 and Endeavour docked with the International Space Station and joined Expedition 16 a few minutes later than planned, and by the end of our work week the first of five planned spacewalks during the shuttle's stay ended with attachment of the Japanese Kibo module and new dexterity added to the space station’s robotic Canadarm2 and crane with Dextre properly installed, at least where it should be.

Initial Power Couplings for the improvement didn't power-up, however, but costly failure was diverted in time when Primary Couplings were installed on the second spacewalk of STS-123, Saturday.

It's been a working weekend for NASA-Houston, and mostly according to plan for the ten people falling around Earth five miles a second, and 200 miles overhead.

On the first spacewalk, EVA record holder and ISS Expedition 16 commander Dr. Peggy Whitson reported her first look inside Kibo from the station showed "nothing unexpected." She was also happy to confirm no "floaters" inside the new station segment, now the first manned space vehicle built by Japan.

Expedition 16 flight engineer Dr. Garrett Reisman and STS-123 mission specialist Dr. Rick Linnehan completed the first spacewalk of the shuttle mission at 0919 UT, out in the void for seven hours and one minute.

Hiccups.

Far beyond the Moon, and just past conjunction, the soft yellowish star overhead before sidereal midnight testifies to the distance Cassini first had to travel even to begin its mission at Saturn.

It has been darting up and around and over and under the gaseous giant, using orbital mechanics of astounding complexities and Saturn and its many moon's gravity wells as third and fourth dimensional side pockets to fly out and away and quickly drawn back in again in precise maneuvering over and over again in an orbit around Saturn unlike any in nature.

Wednesday evening, in a much anticipated event Cassini was busy collecting data as it sliced just under the brightest moon in the solar system, over fresh snow on the south pole of Enceladus.

Slewing cameras as it moved by at 9 miles a second (14.4 kps); and only 32.3 miles above its surface, Cassini performed another unprecedented maneuver in a mission composed of unprecedented maneuvers to discover more about still another outer solar system discovery.

Almost everyone who read a newspaper on Earth knew the purpose. Ice geysers, shooting towers of wispy strands the fan directly away at distances far greater than Enceladus' width had been discovered where a heat signature was spotted in the Infrared spectrum earlier in the mission. Cassini, steered by controllers at JPL a billion miles away in Pasadena, was forced to zip directly through what apparently were the highest water fountains known to exist in our star system.

Enceladus has joined its Saturnian sister Titan, and Jupiter’s Io and Europa, as a member of the human "Hit Parade" of most intriguing moons.” It's large enough for its mass to have crushed itself into a sphere, but has a snow-blinding diameter roughly equal to the length of Interstate 95 in North Carolina.

As monumental a success as the maneuver turned out to be in adding another achievement to Pasadena’s long list of unsurpassed magic, as JPL waited for the data to download as it arrived in packets from 90 light minutes away as it was being scooped up by the Deep Space Network, and as Cassini continued a mad dash toward Titan, it became clear after a time that a “software hiccup” had spoiled a most important part of the show.

Planetary scientists won’t be disappointed with the pictures. They may even yet begin to answer the question of what forces are at play making Enceladus so “dynamic” and new in its south while so obviously ancient and quiet in its north. Those same scientists continue to puzzle over the awesome complexities of Saturn’s rings, and Enceladus with her high fountains of water ice somehow plays a role in that mystery.

Leading into the flyby Cassini shot side glances of those rings nearly edge on and caught now alomost routine shots of more than a few of the Ring’s Shepherd Moons, dancing to a melody we still can’t quite hear. Enceladus may be chief among them, particulary concerning its part in the cycling of Saturn's E-Ring.

But the very experiment onboard Cassini needing to be inside those tremendous Fountains of Enceladus became useless at the very moment it was most needed, though shuffling of software that had been rehearsed and rehearsed, and rehearsed again in the days beforehand. It was an anomaly suitable to a short story by Arthur C. Clarke.

JPL explained the "hiccup" this way:

"During Cassini's closest approach, two instruments were collecting data--the Cosmic Dust Analyzer and the Ion and Neutral Mass Spectrometer. An unexplained software hiccup with Cassini's Cosmic Dust Analyzer instrument prevented it from collecting any data during closest approach, although the instrument did get data before and after the approach. During the flyby, the instrument was switching between two versions of software programs. The new version was designed to increase the ability to count particle hits by several hundred hits per second. The other four fields and particles instruments on the spacecraft, in addition to the ion and neutral mass spectrometer, did capture all of their data, which will complement the overall composition studies and elucidate the unique plume environment of Enceladus."And the raw imagery doesn't disappoint, with promising new information promising to be teased out in the days ahead.

Amazing Cassini, unscathed, roboticly unembarrassed, now speeds on toward Titan, continuing a long and amazing tour.

Cassini returns to Enceladus next October.

Europe’s Progress:

And then there’s the Jules Verne, ESA's new unmanned ATV space truck, which was inserted safely into a parking orbit after being lifted high and fast aloft from equatorial Kourou while perched atop a powerful Ariane 5.

During initial orbital checkout, in a “holding pattern” and with time to kill as controllers waits for Endeavour to depart for its turn at the Harmony Node at ISS, ESA ground controllers worked feverishly to restore 7 of 28 reaction control thrusters and one of three of the ATV’s main engines, failing to respond to command.

They were successful in restoring the fire (though ESA was confident the cargo vessel would safely make it to ISS regardless) and they can stop sweating, for the moment, ahead they can look forward to new ATV’s first semi-automated docking depending the hardcore-proven Russian-supplied and Ukrainian-built Kurs docking system.

Conclusion:

Noteworthy in all this are simple facts illustrating little problems are always essential parts of the stories of big successes, and big success seems highly dependant upon now-working systems that were once spectacular failures.

That Kurs docking system, an unquestioned success today and essential to the ISS and Russia's Progress, was a buggy and unholy mess, playing a role in breath-stealing human and mechanical error such as more than one complete miss, near miss and at least one catastrophic accident in the days of the Soviet MIR space station program only eleven years ago.

And Jules Verne was successfully propelled to its present station-keeping orbit by the once- equally disastrous Ariane 5, which exploded nine miles up and rained debris on the French Guyana and Brazilian coast over an area of many miles twelve years ago.

Remembered clearly that day the cry of a Kourou facility launch director, when it happened, who reported with tears, “it is all over, it is all finished.”

Clearly, it was not.

And then the beginning of this present NewSpace Race, even throughout the world, might well be marked by the hellish disintegration of Columbia over Texas on February 1, 2003., though some would mark it with Ronald Reagan's determination to open the sky to entrepreneurship the previous decade. It was Columbia that refocused public attention, and without political will, Lincoln believed, nothing is possible.

Far from ending manned and unmanned space exploration, renewed Vision starts with documented mechanical and systemic failure. Failure may not be "an option," but it is a proven element essential to success.

Saturday, March 8, 2008

Space truck set for maiden voyage

Not another Progress, ATV is ESA's test for a future manned ISS booster

BBC
By Jonathan Amos
Science reporter

The Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV) is an unmanned ship that can carry up to 7.6 tonnes of supplies to the International Space Station (ISS).

Its other primary role is to push the orbiting outpost higher into the sky to keep it from falling back to Earth.

The ATV will launch on an Ariane 5 rocket from the Kourou spaceport in French Guiana at 0403 GMT on Sunday.

Its mission will be a huge statement of capability.

The maiden voyage will announce that Europe now has some important new technical competencies to rival the very best in the space exploration business.

Mission Coverage

Ambitions for Kourou

Further proof of the birth of Space Race II, ESA plans for expansions at Kourou, it's ideally situated spaceport

By Jonathan Amos
Science reporter

BBC
He is content, however, because this is just the right kind of depression compared with the one his Arianespace company was contemplating just a few years ago.

This is the fire bowl, recently dug from granite, that will deflect the exhaust plume and noise away from a Soyuz rocket as the Russian vehicle lifts clear of the launch gantry on its maiden voyage from the Kourou spaceport next year.

It is all part of the grand plan to provide the complete package at Europe's launch complex in French Guiana - any payload to any orbit.

The portfolio will include Soyuz, a medium-class launcher; the company's workhorse heavy-lift vehicle, the Ariane 5; and a soon to debut mini-rocket known as Vega.

The satellite industry likes the prospect of it all and has given Arianespace a bulging order book; the French-run business has posted sales of just under one billion euros for the past year.

It is all a far cry from May 2003 when a flat market and the disastrous failure of an Ariane vehicle in flight had brought the company to its knees.

Read more HERE.

Thursday, March 6, 2008

ATV still cranked up for Sunday launch

Important for post-Shuttle Interim, Important for ESA, Important for Roscosmos - In short: "Important"

ESA - RussianSpaceWeb.com - Europe’s brand-new transport ship designed to re-supply the International Space Station, is preparing for its maiden voyage. The launch of the Ariane-5 rocket carrying the first Automated Transfer Vehicle, ATV, is scheduled during early hours of March 9, from the European spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana.

The 19-ton ATV-1 vehicle was dubbed Jules Verne, after a prolific 19th century French novelist, who made many brilliant predictions about the future of space flight. The spacecraft is expected to be the first in a series of such ships heading to the station roughly every 17 months. They will play a critical role in supporting human permanent outpost in the Earth orbit, especially after NASA retires the Space Shuttle in 2010.

In addition to its space station role, the ATV project brought European aerospace industry ever closer to developing a vehicle for human space flight. Even though, it is not capable of carrying people, the ATV gives Europe’s future astronauts the biggest hope for entering space onboard their own spacecraft. It sports all necessary systems for automated rendezvous and docking with the space station, while its internal cargo volume provides short-sleeve environment for the station crew.

European Space Agency published several concepts for the follow-on versions of the ATV ship, including one equipped with a capsule capable of returning cargo to Earth. Sources within the European aerospace industry also said that ATV’s engineering experience could serve as a bridge toward a new-generation manned spacecraft, possibly developed in cooperation with Russia.

A Russian firm RKK Energia cooperated closely with the European space industry in the ATV program, supplying a number of critical systems, including rendezvous and docking and refueling hardware.

The flight plan for ATV-1 calls for the docking with the International Space Station, ISS, at the beginning of April 2008, after an array of tests and maneuvers in orbit. It will then remain as a part of the orbital complex until August, while the station’s crewmembers unload its cargo and use its engines to raise the outpost’s orbit.

Upon completing its mission, the ATV-1 will undock from the station with up to 6.4 tons of trash. The vehicle will then be directed into the Earth atmosphere to burn up over the remote area of the Pacific Ocean.