Kosmotras Launches Again
apsmith writes "When somebody says "world space power", how many of you think of Ukraine? Kosmotras has done it again though, with a third $1000/pound launch December 20, 2002 to low Earth orbit of six spacecraft on the Dnepr (formerly SS-18 ICBM) launch vehicle. Among the six were a variety of small European, South American, and one Saudi satellite, and a 'dummy' of the commercial TrailBlazer craft headed to the Moon next year. The Rubin2 craft launched yesterday is also of interest, as it will be the first Internet-controlled spacecraft to operate 24 hours a day without having to use ground stations."
Is this a sustainable industry, or are they just using up inventory of old ICBMs?
Wasn't this NASA's or X-project's or somebody's goal for cost to weight ratio of putting stuff in orbit? Is this relatively cheap compared to what it costs NASA per pound? Anyone know?
"Sic Semper Tyrannosaurus Rex."
Energy: time to change the picture.
The Dnepr can launch 4500 kg, and the cost figure I heard was $10 million...
And yes, it was NASA's goal for their "Space Launch Initiative" to bring costs down "an order of magnitude", to about $1000/lb. Unfortunately, government regulations prohibit NASA from using any non-US launch vehicle...
Energy: time to change the picture.
Energy: time to change the picture.
Looks like a standard PC crammed into a spaceworthy shell. The ultimate case mod? "Look guys I shot my PC INTO SPACE! And I can control it through the INTERNET!!! Just wait till SLASHDOT sees this! I'm the coolest casemodder EVER!"
What Would Satan Do?