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Post Info TOPIC: Foton-M2 mission


L

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RE: Foton-M2 mission
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The Foton-M2 was a space mission aboard an unmanned Foton-M spacecraft carrying a mainly European payload by the European Space Agency (ESA). It was placed into orbit by a Russian Soyuz-U launcher on 20 June 2005 at 14:00 Central European Time from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan by the Russian Space Agency (RKA).
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L

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RE: Photon M launch May 31st
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One of the main focuses in the search for living organisms on other planets and the possibilities for transfer of life between planets currently centres on bacteria, due to the organisms simplicity and the possibility of it surviving an interplanetary journey exposed to the harsh space environment. This focus may develop to encompass more advanced organisms following the results of an ESA experiment on the recent Foton-M2 mission where it was discovered that lichens are very adept at surviving in open space.

Lichens are not actually single organisms but an association of millions of algal cells, which cooperate in the process of photosynthesis and are held in a fungal mesh. The algal cells and the fungus have a symbiotic relationship, with the algal cells providing the fungus with food and the fungus providing the alga with a suitable living environment for growth. Lichens are well known extremophiles, being able to survive the harshest environments on Earth. The most striking element of the finding is the complexity of this organism: it is multicellular, it is macroscopic and it is an eukaryote, meaning that on the evolutionary scale it is a much more modern organism than bacteria. In fact lichens can be considered as very simple ecosystems.


Electron microscopic image of lichen following post-flight analysis. The cells are complete and not broken


The experiment which took place during the Foton mission was called ‘Lichens’ and was one of the exobiology experiments that was located in the ESA Biopan facility. This exposure facility was located on the outer shell of the Foton return module and, once at the correct orbital altitude, opened to exposure the samples inside to open space, i.e. exposed to vacuum, wide fluctuations of temperature, the complete spectrum of solar UV light and bombarded with cosmic radiation. During the Foton-M2 mission, which was launched into low-Earth orbit on 31 May 2005, the lichens, which came from two different species (Rhizocarpon geographicum and Xanthoria elegans) were exposed for a total 14.6 days before being returned to Earth. At the conclusion of the mission the lid of Biopan was closed to protect the lichens from the conditions of re-entry. The Biopan was thereafter transported back to ESA ‘s research facility, ESTEC, in Noordwijk, the Netherlands to be opened.


Rhizocarpon geographicum, species of lichen
Credits: L. Sancho


The results of the experiment were presented by one of the experiment team members, Dr. Rosa de la Torre from the Spanish Aerospace Research Establishment (INTA) in Madrid, at a post-flight review in October at ESTEC. Initial conclusions of the experiment, which is under the scientific leadership of Prof. Leopoldo Sancho from the Complutense University of Madrid, indicate that lichens have the capacity to resist full exposure to the harsh space conditions, especially high levels of UV radiation. Analysis post flight showed a full rate of survival and an unchanged ability for photosynthesis.

This experiment opens up many possibilities for future research into the possibility of transfer of life between planets. Follow up experiments could focus on questions such as to what extent lichen, if transported by a meteorite, can survive the re-entry conditions into Earth’s atmosphere, i.e. what degree of shielding would be needed for lichen samples to survive? The outcome of this Biopan experiment also suggests that lichens might survive at the surface of Mars. Follow-up experiments on ground and in space are bound to provide further answers to these intriguing astrobiological questions.

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RE: Foton Landing 16th June
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The Foton-M2 craft touched down about 90 miles southeast of the town of Kostanay in Kazakhstan, close to the Russian border at 0837 GMT.

Russian military helicopters and jeeps were dispatched from a base in the city of Orenburg.

"The Foton-M2 mission has been a resounding success and I look forward to seeing the positive impact the results of the experiments will have in the future" - Daniel Sacotte, director of human spaceflight for microgravity and exploration programs (ESA).



The spherical entry module separated from the other components of the Foton spacecraft after a 45-second burn was conducted high above South Africa to send the capsule on a path into Earth's atmosphere.
After a fall through the atmosphere protected by an ablative head shield, three parachutes were deployed to slow the entry vehicle prior to touchdown. While descending toward the ground under the main parachute, the Foton was to have fired braking rockets to further cushion the impact.

A small capsule known as Fotino had been intended to be attached as a piggyback payload on the launch, but it was removed due to inadequate funding. Developed by 100 European students, Fotino was supposed to be released by the Foton before entering the Earth's atmosphere to test a number of inexpensive technologies in advance of the larger Young Engineers Satellite-2 (YES2) mission.

The next Foton flight in 2006 will carry YES2 to demonstrate a tether-based inflatable entry vehicle that uses no rocket engines or parachutes.



-- Edited by Blobrana at 16:20, 2005-06-16

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RE: Photon M Landing
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Scorpions, newts, geckos and lizards that spent 16 days in space on board a space laboratory have been returned to Earth and are feeling fine, agencies reported Thursday.

The animals have returned to the Earth after an orbiting mission with Russia’s Foton space lab.

The species on board will be welcomed as true cosmonauts ” Foton mission director Nikilai Sokolov told Itar-Tass earlier Thursday.



Foton, a satellite laboratory with micro-organisms, lizards, tritons, scorpions and snails on board, was launched from the Baikonur cosmodrome on May 31.

Russian and European experiments were carried out on Foton in chemistry, physics and biotechnology, in particular aimed at obtaining highly purified drugs for the treatment of immunodeficient conditions, viral diseases and cancer.

Great significance is drawn to the flight of Foton M-2 in Europe, the chief of the European Space Agency’s research programs in Russia, Christian Feichtinger, was quoted by Itar-Tass as saying.

He said the satellite carried 385 kilograms of European equipment, and the research program included more than 20 experiments.

Feichtinger described the evaluation of the effects of stress on the nervous system of scorpions and experiments with fluids in conditions of weightlessness as the most interesting lines of research.

Russian scientists are pursuing four biological experiments and about 20 experiments in physics, chemistry and space biotechnology in Foton.

In particular, lizard studies could help scientists to develop methods for treating osteoporosis, or bone fragility caused by calcium deficiency, while tritons are to provide clues to organ regeneration.


http://www.mosnews.com/news/2005/06/16/scorpiosspace.shtml

-- Edited by Blobrana at 17:11, 2005-06-16

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RE: Photon-M-2 space lab
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The Photon-M-2 space laboratory's descent module is to bring back crayfish, geckos, snails and tritons today.
"Cuban crayfish, geckos, Spanish tritons, edible snails and micro-organisms spent 16 days inside a Photon container" - Murad Tairbekov, Doctor of Biology and space-lab chief.
The Photon-M-2 lifted off May 31 from Baikonur atop a Soyuz carrier rocket.

"The descent module is to land at about 11.00 a.m. Moscow time" - mission-control spokesman.


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The European payload carried by Foton-M2 covers a scientific programme consisting of 39 experiments in fluid physics, biology, material science, meteoritics, radiation dosimetry and exobiology.

Of particular interest, the STONE-5 experiment considers artificial meteorites of sedimentary origin and aims to study the physical, chemical and biological modifications caused by atmospheric entry.

Three different types of rock, loaded with micro-organisms, are mounted at the stagnation point in the heat shield (the hottest region during re-entry) of the Foton-M2 re-entry capsule. During re-entry into the atmosphere at the end of the two-week flight the three rocks will be subjected to temperature and pressure loads comparable to those experienced by meteorites.


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RE: Photon M launch May 31st
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RE: Foton-M3 Launched
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Launched!
The Foton microgravity research capsule is embarking on a 16-day mission in space before returning to Earth in mid-June.
The unmanned Foton-M2 craft lifted off on the Soyuz at 1200 GMT from launch complex 2 at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.
Nine minutes later, the three-stage rocket placed the spacecraft into the expected orbit with an apogee, or high point, of about 189 miles, a perigee of around 163 miles, and an inclination of 63 degrees.

The mission carries a wide array of over three dozen experiments in a variety of fields including physical sciences, biology, fluid mechanics, exobiology, materials sciences, and technology demonstrations. The 1,200-pound payload largely comes from European nations.

Many of the scientific investigations finding their way to space aboard the Foton are being reflown after their Foton-M1 capsule was destroyed when its Soyuz booster exploded seconds after lift-off in October 2002. All the experiments on the failed flight are on this mission with the exception of a French biological incubator and a few student experiments,
An applicable technology demonstration called Favourite - for Fixed Alkaline Vapour Oxygen Reclamation In-flight Technology Experiment - will test a new way to generate oxygen from water molecules.
Called electrolysis, the process splits hydrogen and oxygen elements from water molecules to be used for breathing aboard manned spacecraft such as the international space station. The two-man crew on the station normally relies on a Russian Elektron system, but that unit recently malfunctioned, leaving the astronauts to use a backup method that produces oxygen through the burning of solid-fuel "candles."

The Favourite hardware riding in the Foton capsule is a newly developed design from Europe that "does not contain moving parts, making it inherently simpler and more reliable," according to an ESA fact sheet. The system is planned to operate for about 40 hours near the end of the flight and is expected to produce 13 litres of oxygen per hour from an average energy usage of about 290 watts. This amount of breathable oxygen is enough to supply half an astronaut.

An experiment originally flown aboard Columbia's ill-fated mission in 2003 was also launched into space aboard the Foton capsule. This effort deals will heat pipes for thermal control systems on future spacecraft.
The largest of the payloads is an automatic fluid physics facility containing four individual experiments. At 390 pounds, FluidPac comprises almost half the internal volume of the Foton's entry module.

A 59-pound exposure experiment housed on the outside of the entry capsule called Biopan contains a number of organic samples such as bacteria and fungi cells. Other bacterial spores will be placed in a simulated environment similar to that on the surface of Mars to evaluate their performance in such harsh conditions.
Several re-entry experiments will test new reusable heat shield technologies made of a ceramic composite material and how the high temperature affects organic compounds like amino acids and rocks containing imbedded microbes.

In addition, a precursor experiment for a future ESA research facility to fly on the international space station carries two scorpions to space to test the affects on the animals of the launch vibrations and fiery re-entry into the atmosphere.
Other components of the Foton's science complement will examine how crystals grow in space, analyze the behaviour of molten metal alloys in weightlessness, and show how single-cell water organisms react to space.

A small capsule known as Fotino had been slated to be riding as a piggyback payload on the launch, but the small student-built sphere was removed due to inadequate funding. Developed by 100 European students, Fotino was supposed to be released by the Foton before entering the Earth's atmosphere to test a number of inexpensive technologies in advance of the larger Young Engineers Satellite-2 mission.
The next Foton flight in 2006 will carry YES2 to demonstrate a tether-based inflatable entry vehicle that uses no rocket engines or parachutes.

Control stations around the world will oversee the Foton mission, ranging from an engineering support room in mission control in Korolev outside Moscow to a European scientific operations centre in Sweden.
The system will be operated from SSC’s ground station at Esrange, Kiruna, Sweden. The SSC ground station will have four to five contacts with the spacecraft per day, each lasting for about five minutes.
Around 30 scientists and engineers will sit at the payload operation centre at Esrange during the mission.
Initially, the operation centre will be manned with six engineers from SSC’s engineering centre in Solna and four from SSC’s ground station at Esrange.
The first contact with the spacecraft is expected at 15.06 UTC on May 31, approximately three hours after lift-off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome.



The 14,000-pound Foton-M2 spacecraft will orbit Earth for almost 16 days before its scheduled re-entry and landing on June 16 at 0832 GMT (4:32 a.m. EDT). The entry module containing the experiments will make a parachuted landing near the city of Orenburg, Russia, near the Kazakhstan border.
This mission marks the 11th time the European Space Agency has significantly participated in flights involving the Foton capsule and its predecessor called Bion dating back to 1987. The Foton's design is based on the Russian Vostok craft that cosmonaut pioneer Yuri Gagarin rode to and from orbit in the first human spaceflight in 1961.

Russia flew twelve Foton missions 1985 through 1999, followed three years later by the botched Foton-M1 launch. The Foton-M craft features several improvements over earlier capsules such as a larger battery capacity to allow larger payloads with higher power consumption.
Previous Foton flights had launched from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome in far northern Russia, and this marks the first such craft to ever lift off from the Kazakhstan launch site.

"Plesetsk has been more and more exploited for military and strategic launches, requiring stricter security rules to be enforced. Baikonur is better suited for launches dealing with scientific and commercial applications." - Antonio Verga, European Space Agency Foton project manager.
The move also reportedly opens up space for the development of the next-generation Angara rocket program.
The next mission in the Foton program is scheduled for October 2006 when Foton-M3 will carry another large research complement into orbit.

"Beyond Foton-M3, there are plans to continue the program with even wider scientific objectives. Formal discussions are still to be held." -Antonio Verga.



-- Edited by Blobrana at 20:06, 2005-05-31

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Foton-M2 mission
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A Russian orbital research laboratory, will be launched tomorrow from the Baikonur space centre in Kazakhstan. The craft will have snails and tritons on board. The animals are to spend sixteen days in the harsh conditions of weightlessness and high irradiation before coming back to Earth, June 16. "The landing unit capsule will carry several ribbed newts and edible snails in it. The unit is expected to land in Kazakhstan. We shall be controlling the landing operation to correct it, if necessary." - Valeri Lyndin, Mission Control Centre spokesman. The Progress R&D bureau (a major space rocket design and manufacturing centre, based in Samara on the Volga) intends to build two Photon M craft within a few years. "A maiden laboratory launch is due just now. Another is expected for October 2006." - Valeri Abrashkin, deputy manager, R&D bureau. The launch, with a Soyuz booster rocket, had been shifted from Plesetsk, in European Russia's north, to Baikonur. "That was a Federal Space Agency resolution," - Valeri Abrashkin. The Photon M craft is designed for research and technological experiments, and manufacture of materials and biotechnological preparations for many fields of industry and research. The Photon M orbit will have a 300-370 kilometre altitude, with a threshold altitude within 260-266 kilometres. A Photon weighs 6.5 tons, out of which research gadgetry accounts for 850-1,200 kilograms. Photon Ms will be orbited by Soyuz booster rockets. The Launch of the Foton-M spacecraft aboard Soyuz-U LV is scheduled from Area 1, Launch Pad 5, on 31st May, 1200 GMT, 2005. 



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