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Space History for February 6
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1804
Died, Joseph Priestly (at Northumberland County, Pennsylvania, USA), English scientist (discovered oxygen)
ref: en.wikipedia.org
1880
J. Palisa discovered asteroid #212 Medea.
1885
N. R. Pogson discovered asteroid #245 Vera.
1916
M. Wolf discovered asteroid #817 Annika.
1923
Died, Edward Emerson "E. E." Barnard, astronomer (Amalthea, Jupiter's fifth satellite; Barnard's Star, second nearest to the Sun)
ref: en.wikipedia.org
1932
M. Wolf discovered asteroid #1219 Britta.
1938
A. Bohrmann discovered asteroid #2350 von Lude; and Y. Vaisala discovered asteroids #1462 Zamenhof, #1463 Nordenmarkia, #1477 Bonsdorffia and #1478 Vihuri.
1942
Y. Vaisala discovered asteroid #2479 Sodankyla.
1959
Jack Kilby of Texas Instruments filed the first patent for an integrated circuit, resulting in US Patent 3138743 A being granted 23 June 1964.
ref: patents.google.com
1959
The US made the first successful launch of a Titan booster, to ~300 km (~200 miles) altitude.
ref: www.strategic-air-command.com
1961
Born, Yuri Ivanovich Onufriyenko (at Ryasnoye, Kharkov Oblast, Ukrainian SSR), Colonel Russian AF, Russian cosmonaut (Mir 21, ISS 4; 389d 14.75h total time in spaceflight)
Cosmonaut Yuri I. Onufrienko, ISS Expedition Four commander, NASA photo (2001)
Source: Wikipedia (spaceflight.nasa.gov killed 25 Feb 2021)
ref: www.spacefacts.de
1967
P. Wild discovered asteroids #1803 Zwicky and #3021.
1968
L. Chernykh discovered asteroids #1772 Gagarin and #1890 Konoshenkova
1970 04:16:06 GMT
USSR launched the Luna E-8-5 No.405 Moon landing mission, initially identified by NASA as Luna 1970A. The first stage failed and the spacecraft did not achieve orbit.
Luna E-8-5 No.405 (or Luna Ye-8-5 No.405) was launched 6 February 1970. NASA initially designated it as Luna 1970A, and tentatively identified it as an attempted Lunar sample return, similar to the later Luna 16 mission. Subsequently released information revealed that it did indeed carry a 5,600 kg (12,300 lb) Luna E-8-5 spacecraft, intended to perform a soft landing on the Moon and return a sample to Earth. The mission failed when a defective pressure sensor caused the first stage to shut down 128 seconds after launch; the spacecraft did not reach Earth orbit.
See also Tentatively Identified Missions and Launch Failures (NASA)
ref: en.wikipedia.org
1971
A golf ball was hit for the first time on the Moon by NASA Apollo 14 astronaut Alan Shepard.
Apollo 14, launched 31 January 1971, was the third mission in which humans walked on the Lunar surface and returned to Earth, and the first to land in the Lunar highlands. On 5 February 1971 two astronauts (Apollo 14 Commander Alan B. Shepard, Jr. and LM pilot Edgar D. Mitchell) landed near Fra Mauro crater on the Moon in the Lunar Module (LM) while the Command and Service Module (CSM) (with CM pilot Stuart A. Roosa) continued in Lunar orbit. During their stay on the Moon, the astronauts set up scientific experiments, took photographs, and collected Lunar samples. The LM took off from the Moon on 6 February and the astronauts returned to Earth on 9 February.
Shepard hit golf balls on the Moon during this historic trip. Roosa carried seeds for the US Forest Service in his personal gear; the seeds were later planted by the Forest Service, and are called "Moon Trees" to reflect their journey.
This was the last Apollo mission in which the astronauts were put in quaratine after their return.
ref: www.aps.org
ref: nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov
1971 18:48:42 GMT
NASA's Apollo 14 Lunar Module ascent stage lifted off from the Moon, carrying astronauts Shepard and Mitchell back to orbit for their return to Earth.
see above
1973
Died, Ira S. Bowen, US physicist, astronomer (Mt. Wilson/Palomar)
ref: phys-astro.sonoma.edu
1973
P. Wild discovered asteroid #2033 Basilea.
1978
Perth Observatory discovered asteroid #3301.
1981
N. Thomas discovered asteroids #2779 Mary, #2999 Dante and #3352 McAuliffe.
1984
E. Bowell discovered asteroids #3316 Herzberg and #3506 French.
1984
Starstruck, Inc., a private launch company, made the first attempted test of a sea-launch system, although the actual launch of their Dolphin rocket was aborted.
Starstruck's Dolphin was a prototype vehicle built as a sounding rocket, and to develop the technology for the planned follow-on vehicle called Constellation. The Constellation rocket was to be a 4-stage vehicle able to loft a payload of approximately 3,200 lb into an elliptical geosynchronous transfer orbit. The Dolphin was a 51 ft long, 42-inch diameter recoverable booster, powered by a 35,000 lbf thrust hybrid rocket. Its payload would be 1000 lb, carried to an altitued of 125 miles. The hybrid rocket was developed and tested in Carson City, Nevada. Douglas Ordahl, the former head of hybrid propulsion at United Technologies Chemical System Division (CSD), was the bridge person from the hybrid work conducted at CSD to the work conducted at Starstruck.
Water launch was selected to reduce the cost required for launch by eliminating the launch pad, to increase orbital insertion options by being mobile, and to avoid government restrictions associated with a launch from land. However, the decision to perform water launches came with a price:
The launch procedure for the Dolphin was fairly straight forward. The Dolphin was filled with LOX, slid off the boat and floated horizontally in the water. A weight, attached to the aft end of the rocket, was dropped into the water and pulled the rocket upright. The nitrogen tanks were pressurized in the water, and the vehicle was ready for launch.
On the first launch attempt, on 6 February 1984, travel had loosened fittings in the nitrogen system used to actuate the valves. Since the vehicle was designed for water launch, access ports were not included in the design, to reduce the number of potential water entry points. An access port had to be made at the launch site, by grinding open the intertank. As a result, a fire started on some electronic circuits. The positive spin on the event is that it demonstrated the safety of hybrid rockets - there were no secondary fires from the (solid) fuel on board.
ref: ntrs.nasa.gov
2004
The Beagle 2 Mars lander was declared lost after over a month of silence following the landing.
Mars Express was the first European Space Agency (ESA) mission to Mars, launched 2 June 2003 from Baikonur Cosmodrome. It consisted of an orbiter, the Mars Express Orbiter, and a lander, Beagle 2. The scientific objectives of the Mars Express Orbiter were to obtain a global high resolution (10 m resolution) photographic geology study, mineralogical mapping (100 m resolution) and mapping of the atmospheric composition, study the subsurface structure, the global atmospheric circulation, and the interaction between the atmosphere and the subsurface, and the atmosphere and the interplanetary medium. The Beagle 2 lander's objectives were to characterize the landing site geology, mineralogy, and geochemistry, the physical properties of the atmosphere and surface layers, collect data on Martian meteorology and climatology, and search for possible signatures of life.
Mars Express arrived at Mars in December 2003 after a 400 million km journey and a course correction in September. The Beagle 2 lander was released on 19 December at 8:31 UTC (9:31 CET) on a ballistic cruise towards the surface. On 20 December, Mars Express fired a short thruster burst to put it into position to orbit the planet. The Mars Express Orbiter fired its main engine for 37 minutes on 25 December at 2:47 UT (9:47 p.m. EST, 24 December) and went into a highly elliptical 250 km x 150,000 km initial capture orbit with an inclination of 25 degrees. The orbit was adjusted by four more main engine firings starting on 30 December to the desired 258 km x 11,560 km near polar (86.3 degree inclination) orbit with a period of 7.5 hours. Near periapsis the top deck is pointed down towards the Martian surface, and near apoapsis the high gain antenna is pointed towards Earth for uplink and downlink. After 440 days the apoapsis was lowered to 10,107 km and periapsis raised to 298 km to give an orbital period of 6.7 hours. Aerobraking can be used to modify the orbit if there are any problems with the main engine. Nominal mission duration was planned to be 1 martian year (687 Earth days) but it was been extended multiple times. The orbit was changed in January 2009 to maintain illumination conditions. As of June 2018, the orbiter was continuing to operate, with ESA celebrating 15 years of Mars Express.
The Beagle 2 coasted for five days after release and entered the Martian atmosphere on the morning of 25 December. Landing was expected to occur at about 02:54 UT on 25 December (9:54 p.m. EST 24 December). No signals have been received and the lander was declared lost on 6 February 2004.
See also NSSDCA Master Catalog re. the Mars Express orbiter.
See also NSSDCA Master Catalog re. the Beagle 2 lander.
ref: www.esa.int
2011
Died, Kenneth H. Olsen, US engineer, founder of Digital Equipment Corporation
ref: en.wikipedia.org
2012
Died (cancer), Janice Elaine Voss PhD, NASA astronaut (STS 57, STS 63, STS 83, STS 94, STS 99; over 49d 3.75h total time in spaceflight)
ref: en.wikipedia.org
2018
Died, Donald Lynden-Bell, British astrophysicist best known for his theories that galaxies contain massive black holes at their center and that such black holes are the principal source of energy in quasars
ref: en.wikipedia.org
2018 15:45:00 EST (GMT -5:00:00)
SpaceX successfully launched the maiden flight of their Falcon Heavy rocket, sending a Tesla Roadster into a solar orbit reaching into the asteroid belt. The Falcon Heavy became the largest operational booster by a factor of 2.
Official SpaceX photo of Falcon Heavy lifting off from LC-39A at Kennedy Space Center, Florida on 6 February 2018
At 3:45 PM EST on Tuesday 6 February 2018, SpaceX successfully launched the maiden flight of their Falcon Heavy rocket from the historic pad at Launch Complex 39A at the Kennedy Space Center, Florida. LC-39A was previously used to launch the Saturn V rockets (last flown in 1973) to the Moon and to place Skylab in orbit. The Saturn V is also the only rocket in history that could deliver more payload to orbit than Falcon Heavy.
Falcon Heavy has a first stage composed of three modified Falcon 9 nine-engine cores, and a standard single-engine second stage. The center core was structurally enhanced to carry the additional thrust loads, while the two side boosters were primarily physically modified by adding attachments to the central core. All three cores also have software and control system modifications necessary for use as a multiple-core system.
For reference, SpaceX states Falcon Heavy's takeoff thrust is about equal to that of eighteen 747 airliners: The 27 Merlin engines together generate more than 5 million pounds of thrust at liftoff, versus the 7.5 million pounds generated by the five F-1 engines of the Saturn V first stage. In addition, with its 27 first stage engines, Falcon Heavy has the greatest number of engines ever successfully used together: Only the Soviet N-1 launcher, with 30 engines, had more - but none of the four launch attempts of the N-1 were successful.
While an overall success, and a tremendous achievement, the maiden flight was marred by two unplanned results:
Unable to restart all three of the engines necessary for landing, the center core of the first stage hit the Atlantic Ocean at a speed of about 300 mph. The crash, about 300 feet from the barge where it was supposed to touch down, took out two of the thrusters on the barge and showered the deck with shrapnel. The loss of the booster raises the cost of the launch, but is a relatively minor detail considering the amount of technology that did work successfully in the effort, including the near-simultaneous touchdown of the two booster rockets at Kennedy, as planned.
The second failure is much less problematic, at least in immediate terms: Instead of entering a solar orbit that extends to that of Mars, the payload - Musk's red Tesla Roadster - went into an orbit reaching into the asteroid belt. While this is seen as a good sign for parties interested in getting to the asteroid belt, it is a concern to others who want to know what the Roadster might run into: SpaceX might have just launched the car that will be involved in the first auto accident in space.
With the launch, Falcon Heavy became the most powerful operational rocket in the world by a factor of two, able to lift nearly 64 metric tons (141,000 lb) to orbit. By comparison, Falcon Heavy's capacity is a mass greater than that of a Boeing 737 carrying a full load of passengers, crew, luggage and fuel.
Inception of Falcon Heavy service is an important event: Not only does it make possible launching heavier payloads than have been possible since the retirement of the Saturn V, it can also be expected to dramatically lower the cost of access to space. Together, making possible heavier payloads at lower cost should open the door to more space development opportunities - including construction of space colonies and the solar power satellite system planned by the L5 Development Group.
ref: web.archive.org
ref: www.spacex.com
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