Constellations, Launch, New Space and more…
AUTHOR
Doug Messier
Frustrated Brazilian Space Research Director Stepping Down

The director of Brazil’s National Institute for Space Research (INPE), Gilberto Câmara, has announced that he will step down from his post later this year, about two years before the end of his term.

“I left the space agency is due to the exhaustion caused by the daily struggle with legislation and institutional structures totally inadequate to institutions of S & T. Adding to the frustration at the lack of renewal of the staff by INPE,” Câmara said in a statement.

The newspaper Folha de Sao Paulo attributes Câmara’s decision to “differences with the leadership of the Brazilian space program and a break with the president of the AEB (Brazilian Space Agency), Marco Antonio Raupp” over the future of a joint rocket project with Ukraine and a proposed merger of AEB and INPE.

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  • August 29, 2011
RSC Energia Turns 65

Dear employees of the company, our dear veterans,
We heartily congratulate you on the 65th anniversary of the S.P. Korolev Rocket and Space Corporation Energia!

Our company, founded by an outstanding engineer, scientist, manager, the farther of space flight academician Sergei Pavlovich Korolev has a glorious history and lasting traditions, and has always been striving towards new horizons in advanced rocket and space technology and meeting difficult challenges of space flight.

The history of RSC Energia is inextricably liked to the development of our country’s long-range missile systems, opening up the space era for mankind, and steady advance and improvement of cutting-edge rocket and space technologies.

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  • August 28, 2011
Progress Losses Include 257 Kg of Food, 10 Paintings

An interesting update from Anatoly Zak at RussianSpaceWeb.com: Progress M-12M was carrying 2,670 kilograms of supplies to the ISS including 257 kilograms of food, 420 kilograms of water and 50 kilograms of oxygen. The spacecraft also carried 10 paintings by the son of the Russian artist Aleksandr Shilov, infamous for his politically convenient portraits of Russia’s powerful and corrupt officials. The collection was reportedly sent to the station for the […]

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  • August 27, 2011
Appointments Made to UKSA Steering Board

Science Minister David Willetts has announced the external membership of the UK Space Agency Steering Board. Rob Douglas will chair the Steering Board and other confirmed members are David Southwood, Sally Cantello and Baljit Dhillon.

The Steering Board’s role is to advise Ministers on the strategies to be adopted by the UK Space Agency. The Board also provides advice and guidance from a commercial standpoint to the Chief Executive and the senior management team on the UK Space Agency’s performance, operation and development, including its management of risk.

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  • August 27, 2011
SFF Hammers Hutchison, Shelby on Heavy-Lift Program

Study Endorses Senate Launch System as Affordable Near-Term Pork

The Space Frontier Foundation today agreed with U.S. Senators Kay Bailey Hutchison and Richard Shelby in their claim that Booz Allen Hamilton’s “Independent Cost Assessment (ICA)” of the Space Launch System shows that SLS “can be initiated within our currently constrained fiscal limitations” and therefore “halt the further loss of skilled aerospace workers now poised to be laid off from the NASA manned spaceflight program.” But that is the end of where we agree with the Texas and Alabama Senators.

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  • August 26, 2011
Cool Video: HTV-2 Re-enters Atmosphere at Mach 20

DARPA’s August 11, 2011, second flight of the HTV-2 hypersonic glider – which ended prematurely after only 9min of a planned 30min flight across the Pacific – was captured on handheld video camera by a crewmember of one of the ships tracking the vehicle’s telemetry as it re-entered the Earth’s atmosphere at 20 times the speed of sound. DARPA does not yet know while the flight ended prematurely. The first […]

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  • August 26, 2011
FAA Grants Fund Improvements at Three Spaceports

The FAA has awarded grants totaling nearly $500,000 to improve spaceports in Virginia, California and New Mexico: $249,378 to the New Mexico Space Port Authority’s Spaceport America to construct a mobile structure to prepare larger rockets before launch; $125,000 to the Virginia Commercial Space Flight Authority’s Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport to improve security and remote monitoring; $125,000 to the East Kern Airport District’s Mojave Air and Space Port in California for […]

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  • August 26, 2011