Space Industry and Business News  
Europe space chiefs elated after freighter completes mission

by Staff Writers
Toulouse, France (AFP) Sept 29, 2008
Europe's space freighter was destroyed over the South Pacific on Monday, ending a glitteringly successful maiden mission to the International Space Station (ISS), officials said.

The European Space Agency (ESA) said the robot truck had outperformed every expectation, while the aerospace firm which built it urged Europe to back a blueprint for transforming the ship into a manned spacecraft.

The Jules Verne, as ESA's first Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV) was called, was sent plummeting to Earth after more than six months in space.

After two operations that dispatched it on a suicidally steep final trajectory, the ATV entered the atmosphere at a height of 120 kilometers (75 miles).

"It broke up at an altitude of 75 kms (46.8 miles) with the remaining fragments falling into the Pacific some 12 minutes later," ESA said in a press release.

At mission control in Toulouse, southwestern France, engineers held up signs emblazoned with the words "Bye Bye Jules" as the 1.3-billion-euro (1.885-billion-dollar) craft expired in a meteor-like streak.

ESA had earmarked a splashdown zone for potential debris in a remote zone east of New Zealand, west of Chile and south of the Easter Islands.

It had asked national and international bodies to tell ships and aircraft to avoid the area during the re-entry phase.

Around a hundred parts of the 13.5-tonne ATV could survive the fiery heat and stress of re-entry and splash down in the area, the agency said last week.

Measuring 10 metres (32.5 feet) in length and with nearly the volume of a large shipping container, the robot craft was launched on March 9 on a one-way trip.

It docked automatically with the ISS on April 3, bringing 7.5 tonnes of equipment, water and air to its three-men crew, and carried out several boosts, using its onboard engines, to take the station away from the clutch of atmospheric drag.

The ATV helped the ISS perform a collision-avoidance manoeuvre, when fragments of an old satellite came close to the station.

As a pressurised module, it also served as much-appreciated extra room aboard the cramped station. The ATV was filled up with the ISS's trash before detaching on September 6.

The Jules Verne will be followed by four more cargo ships, whose assembly and launch will each cost over 300 million euros (435 million dollars). The next ATV mission is planned for 2010.

The ATV's success has spurred thinking within ESA that the spacecraft could be modified to carry humans.

The scheme would help the ISS during a transport crunch, likely to last four or five years, between the phaseout of the US space shuttle in 2010 and its planned successor, the Aries-Orion rocket-plus-capsule system.

During this time, the only transporter to and from the orbital outpost will be Russia's veteran Soyuz.

ESA ministers will hold their first discussion of the idea when they meet in the Netherlands on November 25-26.

Simonetta Di Pippo, ESA's director of human spaceflight, on Monday described the flight of the Jules Verne as a "fantastic accomplishment."

"Europe has now taken a further step towards its capability of being able to transport and return cargo and astronauts to and from space," she said.

Astrium, a subsidiary of the European aerospace giant EADS, referred to its two-phase plan, called ATV Evolution, that would firstly turn ATV into a vehicle to return scientific samples and other freight back to Earth, and secondly into a manned craft.

The mission of the Jules Verne "is only a first step," said Astrium boss Francois Auque in a press release.

"Europe must now take the necessary decisions to prepare for the future of space transport and human exploration of space and strengthen its position as a great space power."

Transforming the ATV into a crew vehicle will require adding a heat shield and other major modifications, and carry substantial costs as the system will have to undergo numerous tests.

It could add to budget strains within ESA and sharpen arguments about the costs of human flight when compared to the value of robot science-gathering spacecraft, analysts said.

Related Links
The latest information about the Commercial Satellite Industry



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Ministers Meet To Take Forward The European Space Policy
Paris, France (ESA) Sep 29, 2008
Ministers in charge of space activities within ESA and European Union Member States have met in Brussels for the fifth Space Council. The Space Council was jointly chaired by French Minister of Higher Education and Research Valerie Pecresse, on behalf of the EU Competitiveness Council, and Maria Van Der Hoeven, Dutch Minister of Economic Affairs and current Chair of the ESA Council at ministerial level.







  • Computer applications float in Internet cloud
  • ASTRA Broadband Services Bundles SES ASTRA's Broadband Activities
  • HP to cut 24,600 jobs worldwide with EDS acquisition
  • Google chief admits to 'defensive component' of browser launch

  • Sea Launch Successfully Delivers Galaxy 19 To Orbit
  • Sea Launch Countdown Underway For The Galaxy 19 Mission
  • Telesat Launches Nimiq 4 Broadcast Satellite
  • ArianeSpace Buys 10 Soyuz Rockets For Kourou Spaceport

  • Airbus expecting 'large' China order by early 2009: CEO
  • Airbus globalises production with China plant
  • Safer Skies For The Flying Public
  • Chinese airlines fly into headwinds in Olympic year

  • Airman Provides Air Support For Army Battlespace
  • The Modern Airborne Military Communications Market
  • Boeing Ships Software-Defined FAB-T Radio Prototype
  • DataPath Wins Suppport Contract For US CENTCOM SatComm Hubs

  • Microsoft courts Chinese consumers with slashed software price
  • Oracle, HP unveil computer to cope with digital explosion
  • Study Spotlights Anti-satellite And Space Debris Threats
  • Australian company launches 3D Internet tool

  • Orbital Appoints Frank Culbertson And Mark Pieczynski To Management
  • Chris Smith Named Director Of Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory
  • AsiaSat Appoints New General Manager China
  • NASA names aeronautics administrator

  • Students And Astronauts Use Powerful New Tool To Explore Earth From Space
  • Raytheon Completes Ground Segment Acceptance Testing For NPOESS
  • NRL HICO-RAIDS Experiments Ready For Payload Integration
  • Infoterra Adds High Resolution City Datasets

  • Trimble Enters To Acquire TopoSys To Extend Its Geospatial Solutions Business
  • Edge 705 GPS-Enabled Cycling Computer Made Available To The Public
  • GPS Navigation Devices Can Be Duped
  • GTX Announces Release Of New 2-Way GPS Module

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement