The results of the taken measures and analysis of the information received the Commission allowed to conclude that during the forming of the "Breeze-M" upper stage's timeline, an unreasonable "narrow" time interval was picked for rotation adjustment of the gyro-stabilized platform. This led to an incorrect orientation of "Breeze-M" upper stage, and, as a consequence, to putting of the spacecraft to an unplanned orbit.
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between the third and fourth main engine burns the "Briz-M" upper stage has lost inertial reference system.
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Telemetry from "Briz-M" upper stage was obtained after the 4th burn. Telemetry was unstable, the signal continued to decline up to the loss of telemetry in approximately 12 minutes after receiving it.
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It was concluded that the middle gimbal ring (Pitch ring), reached a hard stop. The remaining 2 rings - yaw and roll - have a degree of freedom of 360°. At this point, inertial reference system was lost, and the error in the orientation of the pitch continued to accumulate over the length of flight.
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The entire flight program was studied. According to it, before maneuvering, guidance system of "Briz-M" upper stage performs a delta-turn of the second gimbal ring (pitch ring) in order to avoid the risk of locking the gyro. Analysis of the mission program revealed that the time allocated for the
delta-turn introduced into the program was incorrectly too little for preparing the maneuver before the third main engine burn.
The anomaly that caused an International Launch Services (ILS) Proton M/Breeze M rocket to deliver a Russian telecommunications satellite into the wrong orbit last month has been attributed to a workmanship error, according to ILS President Frank McKenna.
McKenna says officials knew within a week that the Aug. 18 launch mishap, which dropped the Russian-owned, Astrium-built Express-AM4 satellite into a useless orbit, was caused by a worker who fed a faulty parameter into the rocket’s flight software system.
Evert Dudok, president of Astrium Satellites of Europe, says the Express-AM4 is now operating nominally, albeit in an orbit far from its intended dropoff point (Aerospace DAILY, Sept. 13).
McKenna says it took several days for Astrium, ILS and their customer, the Russian Satellite Communications Co. of Moscow, to establish communication with the spacecraft, though officials knew “within 12 hours” after the satellite was delivered to the wrong orbit that the cause of the launch mishap was not an equipment failure.
“It was a human error and it was an individual input,” McKenna says, adding that “the verification was run, but it was not caught.” However, “all the Proton stages operated properly from an equipment standpoint,” he says, and “all the mission parameters . . . were nominal.”
Based on the findings of an interagency failure review board convened in Russia shortly after the launch mishap, McKenna says three or four corrective actions will be taken, including verifying human input into the launch vehicle flight software and the process of running flight-software simulations on the ground prior to missions, as well as checking equipment and programming at the launch site prior to liftoff.
“All of that’s being verified now for every upcoming mission in terms of its flight software, including the two that are going to be launched in September,” McKenna says. “Additional checks are to be done at the launch base in this area, as we will do [for] every mission from this point forward.”
ILS is planning a “relatively quick return-to-flight program” as the company implements corrective actions in advance of seven remaining planned missions on tap this year, including launch of a Russian military satellite and the SES Quetzsat-1 this month, both of which have been delayed roughly three weeks as a result of the launch mishap.
{...}
Name EXPRESS AM-4
NORAD # 37798
COSPAR designator 2011-045-A
Epoch (UTC) 2011-09-13 05:33:28
Orbit # at Epoch 108
Inclination 51.145
RA of A. Node 270.744
Eccentricity 0.5805891
Argument of Perigee 31.360
Revs per day 3.97174450
Period 6h 02m 33s (362.55 min)
Semi-major axis 16 843 km
Perigee x Apogee 686 x 20 243 km
BStar (drag term) 0.005970900 1/ER
Mean anomaly 11.768
Propagation model SDP4
Element number / age 41 / 1 day(s)
WASHINGTON — The Russian government will guide the large Express–AM4 telecommunications satellite, which was launched into a useless orbit in August, into a controlled atmospheric descent starting March 20 so that any surviving pieces will land in the Pacific Ocean, a senior official from Russia’s state-owned satellite telecommunications operator said March 15.
{...}
The clock is ticking for an innovative plan to recycle a doomed Russian communications satellite that's been stranded in the wrong orbit since its launch last August.
One Russian official has said the plan is to ditch the $265 million Express-AM4 satellite over a stretch of empty ocean sometime before March 26. But a company called Polar Broadband Ltd. says the spacecraft can not only be saved, but also moved into a new orbit to provide improved communications services to scientists in Antarctica.
{...}
According to Denis Pivnyuk, deputy financial director of Russian Satellite Communications Company (RSCC), the satellite hasn’t been damaged, but after spending seven months in the miscalculated orbit, constantly going through earth’s radiation fields, its life span has been drastically reduced.
RSCC has confirmed that the use of the satellite for tasks it was designed for is impossible. Underwriters have declared it a total loss and paid the insurance claim to the owners of the spacecraft.
But William Readdy, a former NASA astronaut and the co-founder of PBL, thinks the expensive heap of space metal can still be useful. At the Satellite 2012 conference last week, the told reporters that the spacecraft could be easily placed into a new orbit which would provide Antarctic research bases with vastly superior communication links to those currently available. According to Readdy, after repositioning, there will be enough fuel on board for more than 10 years of orbit maintenance.
This is not the first satellite repurposing project for Readdy. In 1998, he helped reposition Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System (TRDSS) for the National Science Foundation’s (NSF) U.S. Antarctic Program. This allowed transmission and reception of data from the Antarctic region. TDRS F1 served this mission for twelve years, before its second retirement in 2010.
According to http://www.interfax.ru/news.asp?id=237513, Ekspress-AM4 deorbit burn is planned at 09:45-10:33 UTC on March 25th, impact - at 13:32 UTC.
NAVAREA [B]NO.12-0176 Date:2012/03/20 12 UTC [/B]
NORTH PACIFIC.
DANGEROUS TO NAVIGATION AREA DESIGNATED
DUE TO SPACE VEHICLE ELEMENTS FALL.
251250Z TO 251450Z AND 261310Z TO
261510Z MAR. AREA BETWEEN 35-00N 45-00N
AND 170-00E 165-00W.
CANCEL THIS MSG 261610Z MAR.
NAVAREA [B]NO.12-0183 Date:2012/03/22 12 UTC [/B]
NORTH PACIFIC.
DANGEROUS TO NAVIGATION AREA DESIGNATED
DUE TO SPACE VEHICLE ELEMENTS FALL.
271330Z TO 271530Z MAR. AREA BETWEEN
35-00N 45-00N AND 170-00E 165-00W.
CANCEL THIS MSG 271630Z MAR.