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SpaceX's rocket testing, Japan's baby satellites and Russia's long gestated Angara 1.1

Rob Coppinger
 on October 14, 2007 2:19 PM | | Comments (0)
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The Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency has lots of info on its Kaguya/Selene lunar orbiter mission here at its mission webpage and a specific update on its "baby satellite" deployments from the probe can be seen here

A somewhat more delayed project is Russia's Khrunichev Space Center designed Angara family of rockets, which according to RIA Novosti, qouting the country's first deputy prime minister, will now start test flights in 2011.

But IMHO it will probably be for the common core booster Angara 1.1. It has the smallest payload capability of the family but you can read more about it and its development at Flight's article here

Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon capsule developer SpaceX has been shaking up the neighbourhood with its engine testing apparently

One launcher that does do its job already with fantastic reliability is the Samarra Space Center built Soyuz, which launched Rocket and Space Corporation Energia's Soyuz TMA-11 manned spacecraft to the ISS on 10 October and NASA.gov is now reporting its successfull docking to the ISS.

While the state owned Chinese Xinhua news agency is reporting that the head of China’s civil space programme is talking about spacewalks "by the end of the decade" rather than the previous plan that called for the next manned mission that included a spacewalk next year...

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