Russian Zenit rocket with US satellite fails at launch


Recommended Posts

Russian Zenit rocket with US satellite fails at launch

A Russian rocket carrying a US-made telecommunications satellite has plunged into the Pacific Ocean shortly after launch.

_65642720_65642719.jpg

Intelsat-27 was to have provided mobile broadband and video services

The Zenit-3SL rocket, which was being operated from a floating pad south of the Hawaiian islands, failed 40 seconds after the lift-off at 06:59 GMT.

The Intelsat-27 satellite was due to be positioned over the Atlantic to provide services to the Americas and Europe.

Officials say no-one was hurt as a result of the incident.

Staff from the Sea Launch company, which organised the launch, direct all missions from a support vessel that sits at a safe distance of about 6.5km uprange of the platform.

The firm said it would establish a review board to determine what went wrong.

"We are very disappointed with the outcome of the launch and offer our sincere regrets to our customer, Intelsat, and their spacecraft provider, Boeing," Kjell Karlsen, president of Sea Launch AG, said in a statement.

"The cause of the failure is unknown, but we are evaluating it and working closely with Intelsat, Boeing, Energia Logistics Ltd and our Zenit-3SL suppliers. We will do everything reasonably possible to recover from this unexpected and unfortunate event."

Sea Launch had not long returned from Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.

A spectacular rocket failure on its converted oil rig in 2007 forced the firm to restructure its finances as orders slowed and debts mounted.

It re-emerged in 2011 and had lofted four satellites successfully from the Odyssey platform before Friday's loss.

The rig-######-pad and its command ship are based at Long Beach, California.

For a mission, the pair move south to the equator at 154 degrees West Longitude.

An equatorial launch location gives a rocket a boost from the Earth's rotation, meaning it can lift heavier payloads into orbit.

Sea Launch is owned now by a Russian-led consortium headed by Energia Overseas Ltd, and is headquartered in Bern, Switzerland.

The commercial market for launching large geostationary telecommunications satellites is intensively competitive.

It has been dominated for several years by the European Ariane rocket, operated by Arianespace, and the Russian Proton vehicle, which is sold by International Launch Services (although the latter has experienced a number of failures of its own recently).

Once the cause of Friday's loss is identified and any necessary corrective action taken, Sea Launch will need to re-instil confidence in the market that its product is a good one.

The Ukrainian-Russian Zenit-3SL vehicle has a generally good reliability record.

A modified version, the Zenit-3SLB, is operated from land, flying out of the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. The most recent of these launches was at the end of 2011.

Launch contracts from the Luxembourg-based Intelsat company had been integral to Sea Launch's return to business after bankruptcy protection.

Intelsat-27, which weighed some 6.2 tonnes at launch, was to have provided direct-to-home TV services and mobile broadband connections.

Source

ied1176e336117b54a798eb2295fb0187_satellite-rocket-pacific-ocean.n.jpg

iad7e4767c23688f56264083017f018d6_1.jpg

ic0083d0fc472d37747d41c82ec7fd272_1.jpg

Each launch is separately insured with the rate depending on the reliability and cost of the vehicle + cost of the satellite but on average $15-30M. Additional coverage can be purchased to cover the loss of a satellite once it's in orbit - about another $20M.

A Soyuz or Atlas V launch is insured rather reasonably vecause of their track record, and Falcon 9's low cost and now proven engine-out capability (last launch lost an engine and kept flying because it was designed to do that.)

I wouldn't want to even see the bill for the Proton with a Briz-M upper stage as it's had serious problems for 2 years, and another launch attempt is later this month. Another Briz-M problem and Russia may have to self-insure it.

I can just imagine for the company that lost their spacecraft that a lot of stuff would get pushed back now that they will have to rebuild the spacecraft. and some of those can take 3 or more years to build.

The engine is the RD-171, an evolution of the RD-170 that was used on Energia. A pretty good engine, following the Russian pattern of a single turbopump driving multiple thrust chambers of which it has 4 (when counting rocket engines you count the turbopumps, not the chambers.)

The problem with a shared turbopump vs discrete ones is that one pump failure takes out the entire cluster, which is why Falcon 9 uses one pump / chamber - it gives them an engine-out capability, meaning it can lose 2 engines (rare) and still make orbit.

That said, most launch failures are not due to an engine failure. More often is the avionics failing, a staging issue (ex: stage doesn't separate when it's burned out), a structural failure or the payload fairing fails to fall away.

RD-171

RD-171M.jpg

Engine shutdown at T+ 25 seconds. Accident review board impaneled, and indications from NPO Energomash that it was off course almost immediately. Could be guidance / flight control or engine failure. Time will tell.

This is the 4th failure in 42 flights for Zenit 3, a failure rate of nearly 10%. This classes Zenit 3 as an unreliable launcher. The overall Zenit 2 and 3 is now 15% - 12 fails/partial fails in 80 flights.

Not good for Russia as because of the Proton problems several launches were going to be transferred to Zenit 3 until Proton's sorted out. That plan's now in question. The Soyuz isn't an option for many of these flights as it has a much lower mass to orbit.

Any bets SpaceX and ULA get a slew of calls?

The SpaceX engine design makes more sense to me.

The capability to lose 2 engines, and still make orbit is extremely exciting. What's the failure rate on them so far?

I'm really interested in seeing the falcon heavy. Anyone know when its due to launch?

As for the Russian's... This doesn't look promising. They will lose contracts if they don't figure out how to make them more reliable.

Angara's RD-191 is based on the RD-171 (Zenit) and its parent the RD-170, plus it will use both the Briz-M and Briz-KM upper stages, all of which are having troubles (KM because its to be based on Briz-M.) Not encouraging.

Falcon 9 v1.0 has had 4 launches, all of which put their primary payload into orbit. The last Falcon 9 v1.0 lost an engine but compensated by shutting it down and automatically burning the other 8 and 2nd stage longer. No human intervention needed. A secondary payload from ORBCOMM was sacrificed because of constraints imposed by NASA; SpaceX calculated a success probability for it at 95% and NASA wanted 99% and they were the primary contractor.

Falcon 9 v1.0 has its last launch March 1, another flight to the ISS, and it will be succeeded by Falcon. 9 v1.1 after that; 40% taller (227 ft), up to 55% heavier payloads and sporting an upgraded & much more powerful engine. Engines will be arranged with one in the center and 8 in a surrounding octagon for better load distribution.

Falcon Heavy ships to their new Vandenberg AFB SLC-4E launch site at the end of this year. Before it flies the new Falcon 9 v1.1 flies first, probably in March 2014, carrying a Canadian payload. FH shortly after. The FH payload is unknown.

Update: looking like the guidance system failed - the Zenit turned South immediately after launch instead of the required Easterly heading. The engine shutdown was automatic and part of the Flight Termination System Russian launchers use (US & European launchers are blown up in the air so the fuel is dissipated before impact.)

http://www.spacepolicyonline.com/news/another-russian-launch-failure-sea-launch-zenit-rocket-fails-at-launch

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Excuse me for having an opinion, fella'... (Why am I not surprised?...) Congrats on your very informative post however...
    • By the sounds of that wall of Fox News propaganda gibberish attacking the Democratic Party you've already had plenty of "juices" flowing this morning. You've ruined what could have been a productive comment thread.
    • (Topic to get the juices flowing this Sunday morning!...) Actually, the situation has almost nothing to do with "lack of skills", especially since assembly-line skills can be taught to anyone, including Americans, certainly. Rather, the inadequacy-to-impossibility of large-scale tech manufacturing in America today, and the reasons why America finds tech manufacturing completely onerous in the 21st century, has to do with politically driven laws amid a plethora of non-scientific, utterly politicized "science-fact" that is patently false, punitive business taxation at every turn, an array of judicial fines of unimaginable scope and complexity, and, last but not least, American unionization strictures that serve to actually slay job creation and hobble all such manufacturing endeavors in America before they can get off the ground. Globalism emerged, they tell us, as the needed answer to American hubris and an unholy American drive to excel. Unless one is buried under mounds of political propaganda, it's easy to see the absurdity of labeling the employees of SpaceX, for instance, as "unskilled labor"... Etc. ad infinitum. At one time in the recent past, American manufacturing prowess was the envy of the world in a wide variety of technical fields! The current federal and state government roadblocks against America becoming competitive globally in tech manufacturing are considerable, it's true, as anyone with a working brain knows. But remarkably, that is only half the story! The other half of the story is, of course, the corporations themselves... Chinese tech manufacturing is simply unassailable in terms of profits, because the Chinese government wants to see its tech manufacturing second-to-none globally so that no companies/nations can compete in terms of ROI, and China has completely succeeded in that goal. Let's tic-off a few things: *Chinese tariff policies are set according to what is considered best for Chinese business, Chinese employees, and the Chinese people. Huge difference with how things are done with tariffs in the US--as the US government (SCOTUS in this case, Congress in others) plainly feels that tariffs are "unfair" for the limited number of citizens who may pay them, whereas nothing is "unfair" when Congress considers the Personal Income Tax rates to be infinitely hike-able, along with infinitely enlarging annual budget deficits. *The Chinese government boldly subsidizes Chinese companies to artificially amplify their profits. *The Chinese government deliberately refuses to avidly demonize Chinese businesses and does not consider Chinese businesses "the enemy", so very unlike American (D)s these days. *Chinese labor laws and businesses are allowed to set their own labor policies according to what Chinese companies consider is best for companies and their employees... Simply put, American workers in tech manufacturing are not allowed to set their own labor policies! It is the height of hypocrisy for Americans to decry working conditions in China while simultaneously ensuring that American products are manufactured in China, not in the US, simply to maximize profits. There is nothing wrong with making a profit, of course, absolutely nothing. But there is plenty wrong with attempts to normalize hypocrisy of this kind! But rank hypocrisy and the (D) party in the US are longtime bedfellows... The current government in Washington is working overtime to see if it can toss out the horribly poor, failed economic policies of the past, while the (D)s still in Washington work very hard to bring back the stupidity whenever possible. With the right policies in place, America can be an infinitely competitive manufacturer.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Conversation Starter
      jessse3334 earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • Reacting Well
      JuvenileDelinquent earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • One Month Later
      Excellence2025 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Excellence2025 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      flexorcist earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      508
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      198
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      152
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      73
    5. 5
      FloatingFatMan
      64
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!