Spaceflight Now Home



The Mission




Rocket: Proton M with Breeze M upper stage
Payload: ARABSAT 4A
Date: Feb. 28, 2006
Time: 2010 GMT (3:10 p.m. EST)
Site: Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan
Satellite feed: Intelsat Americas 6, Transponder 9, C-band, 93° West




Spaceflight Now +



Premium video content for our Spaceflight Now Plus subscribers.

NASA employee briefing
Space science funding, the Vision for Space Exploration and the recent controversy over public affairs clashing with agency scientists. These topics and more are discussed in this NASA employee question and answer session with Administrator Mike Griffin and Deputy Administrator Shana Dale held Feb. 27 from agency headquarters in Washington.

 Dial-up | Broadband

Lockheed's CEV plans
As part of Lockheed Martin's plans for the Crew Exploration Vehicle, the company has announced that final assembly and testing of the capsules will be performed at the Kennedy Space Center's Operations and Checkout Building. Lockheed Martin officials, Florida's lieutenant governor, the local congressman and a county economic development leader held this press conference Feb. 22 to unveil the plans.

 Play video

Mars orbiter briefing
With two weeks until its arrival at the red planet, NASA and Lockheed Martin officials hold this Feb. 24 news conference on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter. The briefing explains how the MRO spacecraft will fire its engines to enter into orbit around Mars and the mission's scientific goals to examine the planet like never before.

 Play video:
   Dial-up | Broadband

 Download audio:
   For iPod

STS-8: Night launch
The space shuttle program performed its first dazzling nighttime launch with Challenger's August 1983 mission. A cockpit camera mounted beside commander Dick Truly captured amazing footage of night turning to day inside the shuttle from the brilliant flame of ascent. STS-8 also featured the first African-American astronaut, Guion Bluford. Challenger's astronauts tell the story of their six-day mission, which deployed an Indian satellite, used the robot arm to look at the orbiter's belly and examined the glow around the shuttle, during this narrated post-flight film.

 Small | Medium | Large

STS-7: America's first woman astronaut
The seventh flight of the space shuttle is remembered for breaking the gender barrier for U.S. spaceflight. Sally Ride flew into space and the history books with her historic June 1983 mission, becoming America's first woman astronaut. STS-7 also launched a pair of commercial communications spacecraft, then deployed a small platform fitted with experiments and camera package that captured iconic pictures of Challenger flying above the blue Earth and black void of space. The crew members narrate highlights from the mission in this post-flight film presentation.

 Small | Medium | Large

STS-6: Challenger debut
The space shuttle program became a two-orbiter fleet on April 4, 1983 when Challenger launched on its maiden voyage from Kennedy Space Center. The STS-6 mission featured the first ever spacewalk from a space shuttle and the deployment of NASA's first Tracking and Data Relay Satellite. The four astronauts narrate a movie of highlights from their five-day mission in this post-flight presentation.

 Small | Medium | Large

STS-121 crew press chat
Commander Steve Lindsey and his crew, the astronauts set to fly the second post-Columbia test flight, hold an informal news conference with reporters at Kennedy Space Center on Feb. 17. The crew is in Florida to examine hardware and equipment that will be carried on the STS-121 flight of shuttle Discovery.

 Play video:
   Dial-up | Broadband

 Download audio:
   For iPod

Become a subscriber
More video



NewsAlert



Sign up for our NewsAlert service and have the latest news in astronomy and space e-mailed direct to your desktop.

Enter your e-mail address:

Privacy note: your e-mail address will not be used for any other purpose.



Proton rocket fails in Arab satellite launch
BY JUSTIN RAY
SPACEFLIGHT NOW

Posted: February 28, 2006

CORRECTION: The second Breeze M burn length was supposed to be 31 minutes, not 21 minutes

A Russian-made rocket booster malfunctioned during launch today, leaving an Arab telecommunications satellite below its intended Earth orbit and dealing a harsh blow to the commercial space industry.

 
The Proton rocket ignites its first stage engines in the final moments of the launch countdown. Credit: ILS TV
 
The Proton M rocket roared off pad 39 at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 2010 GMT (3:10 p.m. EST) carrying the ARABSAT 4A spacecraft. The commercial mission was managed by International Launch Services, the joint U.S.-Russian firm that markets Proton and American Atlas rockets.

About 10 minutes into the flight, the three lower stages of the Proton had completed their systematic firings and dropped away as planned. That left the Khrunichev-built Breeze M upper stage and attached satellite payload flying an initial suborbital trajectory.

The Breeze M's main engine ignited a few moments later to ascend into a 108-mile-high parking orbit. ILS reported that the burn had occurred as scheduled, ending at T+plus 14 minutes, 45 seconds.

Three more engine firings were planned by the Breeze M over the next three-and-a-half hours to propel the 7,366-pound satellite to geosynchronous transfer orbit.

Exactly when during the course of the launch the failure struck isn't clear based on information released by ILS tonight. But here is what was supposed to have happened:

The rocket was slated to remain in that parking orbit for 50 minutes, coasting across the Pacific and lower tip of South America before the next critical engine burn was expected, beginning at 2115 GMT (4:15 p.m. EST) and lasting 31 minutes. A minute after the burn's conclusion, the Breeze M would jettison its emptied Additional Propellant Tank -- a donut-shaped structure surrounding the stage's main body. The engine would then re-start at 2148 GMT (4:48 p.m. EST) for a three-minute burn.

 
The Proton rocket lifts off with ARABSAT 4A. Credit: ILS TV
 
The back-to-back burns were anticipated to produce an orbit with a high point of 22,236 miles, low point of 538 miles and inclination of 51.5 degrees to the equator.

Had the mission been going according to plan, Breeze should have coasted in that orbit until 2349 GMT (6:49 p.m. EST) when a nearly eight-minute engine burn was designed to raise the low point upward to 1,957 miles and greatly reduce the inclination to 14.2 degrees. ARABSAT 4A was expecting to be released from the rocket motor at T+plus 4 hours to complete the launch.

"Preliminary flight information indicates that the Breeze M upper stage shut down early during its planned burn sequence," ILS said in its failure announcement. "As a contingency, the satellite was separated. We cannot comment on the disposition of the spacecraft at this time."

ARABSAT 4A carried enough fuel for its on-board propulsion system to maneuver the spacecraft to its final destination from the geosynchronous transfer orbit that the Proton rocket was targeting. Those maneuvers would circularize the orbit at 22,300 miles and reduce inclination down to the equator, reaching a geostationary orbit where the craft would match Earth's rotation and appear fixed over one location -- 26 degrees East longitude.

But a Breeze M failure in the midst of the complicated launch sequence likely strands ARABSAT 4A in a useless orbit with little hope of overcoming the mishap. The amount of fuel that would be required to cover missing altitude and inclination changes from the botched launch, plus the travels to achieve geostationary orbit, probably means the satellite cannot save itself.

The craft's current orbit, however, was not disclosed by ILS. The actual orbit the satellite is flying in will determine the chances of salvaging ARABSAT 4A.

The European firm EADS Astrium built the satellite based on the Eurostar E2000+ design. It is equipped with 24 C-band transponders and 20 Ku-band transponders as part of a communications package made by Alcatel Alenia Space.

 
The ARABSAT 4A spacecraft is seen here mounted atop the Breeze M stage during final pre-launch preparations at Baikonur. Credit: ILS
 
ARABSAT 4A is the first in a new generation of spacecraft for the Arab Satellite Communications Organization of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. The satellite would have provided direct broadcast television, data relay, Internet and telephony services across the Middle East, North Africa and Western Europe.

EADS Astrium is in the final assembly phase of readying the ARABSAT 4B spacecraft for launch later this year. That mission is scheduled to ride a Proton/Breeze M vehicle, too.

Today's failure was the third in 36 launches of ILS Protons since commercial missions began in 1996. The two earlier mishaps -- in 1997 and 2002 -- involved Block DM upper stages, which ILS no longer actively markets for its Proton launches.

Ten previous ILS launches using the newer Breeze M had been successful since December 2002.

It is too soon to know the impact this failure will have on the year's Proton launch schedule. The next flight had been targeted for the end of April with the Hot Bird 8 communications satellite for European operator Eutelsat.

"A Russian State Commission is being formed to determine the reasons for the anomaly. In parallel with the State Commission, ILS will form its own Failure Review Oversight Board to review reasons for the anomaly and define a corrective action plan," ILS said in tonight's announcement.

"ILS remains committed to providing reliable, timely launch services for all its customers. To this end, ILS will work diligently with its partner Khrunichev to return Proton to flight as soon as possible."

Meanwhile, ILS' other rocket -- the Lockheed Martin Atlas -- has a remarkable record of 78 consecutive successful launches dating back to 1993. An Atlas 5 dispatched the first robotic probe to visit the unexplored planet Pluto last month, and the rocket's next launch is targeted for April 20 from Cape Canaveral.



MISSION STATUS CENTER