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Archive for April, 2010

April 7, 2010

STS-131 Space Shuttle Discovery Launch

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Space Shuttle Discovery lifted off successfully on April 5, 2010, from Kennedy Space Center\’s Launch Pad 39A. The primary payload of the mission is the Multi-Purpose Logistics Module Leonardo, which is filled with food and science supplies for the International Space Station. The STS-131 crew consists of Commander Alan Poindexter, Pilot James Dutton, Mission Specialists Richard Mastracchio, Dorothy M. Metcalf-Lindenburger, Stephanie Wilson, JAXA\’s Naoko Yamazaki, and Clayton Anderson.

Read more about the International Space Station…

 

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April 2, 2010

Soyuz TMA-18 Launch

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Soyuz TMA-18 launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome on April 2, 2010. Three members of the Expedition 23 crew are heading to the International Space Station: Commander Aleksandr Skvortsov, Flight Engineer Mikhail Korniyenko, and Flight Engineer Tracy Caldwell Dyson.

Read more about the International Space Station…

 

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April 2, 2010

IKAROS

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Credits: JAXA

 

While solar sail projects around the world are starving for funding, in Japan things are different. The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) is developing a small solar power sail demonstrator, IKAROS (Interplanetary Kite-craft Accelerated by Radiation Of the Sun). IKAROS is equipped with a square sail made of polyimide resin and 0.0075 mm thick. Long-term plans of the agency include a medium-sized solar power sail with a diameter of 50 m and ion-propulsion engines that will explore the Trojan asteroids and Jupiter.

 

 

The solar power sail is a slightly different concept than the traditional solar sail. In addition to the solar sail, the solar power sail has a thin film of solar cells deployed on the membrane. The solar cells generate electricity that can be used to power ion-propulsion engines onboard the spacecraft. Fuel-effective mission profiles are made possible by such hybrids.

 

IKAROS will be launched from the Tanegashima Space Center on top of a H-II launch vehicle. It will share the ride with the Venus Climate Orbiter “AKATSUKIâ€.

 

JAXA is committed to leading the research and the development of solar sails:
“JAXA will lead future solar system exploration using solar power sails. Our missions will lead to lower cost in the solar cells market, whose growth is a key factor for global warming prevention. Those low-cost solar cells are also the foundation of future solar power satellite systems.â€

 

Centauri Dreams presents the comments of Osamu Mori, the project leader for the sail mission, on the solar-powered attitude control system of the spacecraft and the deployment method of the sail. You can find more information about IKAROS on JAXA’s web site.

 

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