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ROCKET SCIENCE
Medvedev to Name and Shame Failed Satellite Launch Officials
by Staff Writers
Moscow, Russia (RIA Novosti) Aug 13, 2012


File image.

Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said on Thursday he will name officials responsible for Monday's failed satellite launch next week. "I would like to hold a meeting on this next week. It will be prepared by the appropriate deputy prime minister and structures. They are tasked with reporting who should be punished and what to do next," Medvedev told a government meeting in Moscow.

He also said Russia's space failures "could not be tolerated anymore."

"I don't know what the cause of the failures is - be it a [faulty] upper stage, mechanical damage, elementary slackness... but this could not be tolerated anymore," a visibly angered Medvedev said "We are losing authority and billions of rubles," he added.

Russia has suffered a string of space failures in recent years, including the failed Mars probe Phobos-Grunt in January.

On Monday, the Proton-M carrying two telecommunications satellites spun out of control after its Briz-M upper stage failed to gain speed.

A source in the government panel told Kommersant daily a fault in the Briz-M's fuel pipe was to blame.

The pipe might have been "mechanically damaged" or held some foreign objects, the source said. The failed launch has prompted Russian space agency Roscosmos to suspend all Proton-M launches until the findings of the inquiry are returned.

Roscosmos declined to comment on the cause of the failure when contacted by RIA Novosti.

Source: RIA Novosti

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ROCKET SCIENCE
Fuel Pipe to Blame for Proton Launch Failure
Moscow (RIA Novosti) Aug 13, 2012
Monday's failed satellite launch was caused by a fault in a fuel pipe, Kommersant daily reported on Thursday, citing a source in the government inquiry. The source said telemetry showed that pressure in the Briz-M upper stage fell sharply following the vehicle's second burn, causing the Proton-M rocket, carrying two communications satellites, to spin out of control. The launch was sc ... read more


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