Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Wayback Machine
60 captures
06 Feb 2009 - 23 Sep 2024
JanFEBMar
Previous capture06Next capture
200820092010
success
fail
COLLECTED BY
Organization:Alexa Crawls
Starting in 1996,Alexa Internet has been donating their crawl data to the Internet Archive. Flowing in every day, these data are added to theWayback Machine after an embargo period.
Collection:alexa_web_2009
this data is currently not publicly accessible.
TIMESTAMPS
loading
The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20090206081945/http://insidegnss.com:80/node/982
Inside GNSS: Engineering Solutions from the Global Navigation Satellite System Community
GPSGalileoGlonassCompassRegional/Augmentation
Search Website
Rakon
Proton-GLONASS122508launch2.jpg
December 25, 2008, launch of three GLONASS-M satellites; Roscosmos photo by S. Sergeev (TSENKICOM)

Russia Launches Three More GLONASS-M Space Vehicles

2Proton-GLONASS122508launch.jpgProton with three GLONASS-Ms
December 26, 2008
Inside GNSS, January/February 2009

The Russian Federal Space Agency (Roscosmos) successfully launched a Proton-M rocket and three GLONASS-M satellites at 10:53 a.m. (GMT) on December 25 from the Baikonur spaceport in Kazakhstan.

The spacecraft were placed into orbital plane 1 on the GLONASS constellation, where they will occupy slots 2, 3, and 8, according to the Roscosmos Information-Analytical Center. Built by Reshetnev Informational Satellite Systems, the modernized GLONASS space vehicles will join 17 operational satellites now in orbit. Newly launched GLONASS satellites are usually brought online within a month or so.

Full Constellation Will Have 30 Satellites, Up From 24

Changes in the GLONASS program this year mean that the full constellation in the future will have 30 satellites rather than 24, with each of three orbital planes will hosting eight nominal and two backup satellites.

The current GLONASS constellation provides 95 percent coverage of Russia territory and 83 percent global coverage, according to Roscosmos and Reshtenev, with each launch improving these values.

In 2007, Reshetnev doubled its production of GLONASS satellites, accomplished in part through introduction of computer-aided acquisition and logistics support technologies and 3-D computer design systems, representatives of the public company said.

Lighter GLONASS-K Satellite Design Improves Survivability, Reduces Launch Costs

By 2010, Russia will launch the first of its GLONASS-K series satellites, with four of these being checked out on orbit over the following two years. A new unpressurized design ensuring operation of the spacecraft systems in an outer space environment is expected to improve satellite survivability while reducing the size and weight of the SVs.

The smaller, lighter design will enable Roscosmos to launch two GLONASS-K satellites at a time on Soyuz-2 rockets rather than Protons, reducing the launch costs by half, according to Roscosmos.

Inset: Roscosmos photo by S. Sergeev (TSENKICOM)

Copyright © 2008 Gibbons Media & Research LLC, all rights reserved.

Hemisphere GPS
NovAtel
Trimble Dimensions 2009
Munich Satellite Summit 2009
SatExpo 2009
GPS Wireless 2009
NavtechGPS
Globalgeo
CTIA
Subscribe to Inside GNSS
HomeSubscription ServicesAdvertiseContact Us
globeCopyright © Gibbons Media & Research LLC. All rights reserved.
1574 Coburg Road No. 233 • Eugene, Oregon 97401-4802 • United States
Telephone 408-216-7561 • Fax 408-216-7525

Problems viewing this page?Contact our webmaster.


[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp