• In total there are 5 users online :: 0 registered, 0 hidden and 5 guests (based on users active over the past 60 minutes)
    Most users ever online was 789 on Tue Mar 19, 2024 5:08 am

Press Release from Ann Druyan & Planetary Society

#14: May - June 2004 (Non-Fiction)
User avatar
Chris OConnor

1A - OWNER
BookTalk.org Hall of Fame
Posts: 17019
Joined: Sun May 05, 2002 2:43 pm
21
Location: Florida
Has thanked: 3511 times
Been thanked: 1309 times
Gender:
Contact:
United States of America

Press Release from Ann Druyan & Planetary Society

Unread post

NEWS RELEASE For immediate release: August 11, 2004Cosmos 1, The World's First Solar Sail Spacecraft,Achieves Critical MilestoneNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the U.S. Air Force will contribute to tracking Cosmos 1August 11, 2004 - PASADENA, CA: With the delivery of all electronic systems, Cosmos 1 -- the world's first solar sail craft -- achieved a critical milestone today in its countdown towards its launch later this year or early in 2005. Cosmos 1 is a project of The Planetary Society and is solely sponsored by Cosmos Studios.The Space Research Institute (IKI) in Moscow has completed the qualification of all flight electronics and tests of mission control software. The parts have been shipped to NPO Lavochkin, one of Russia's largest aerospace companies, where they will be integrated on to the spacecraft.Dr. Louis Friedman, Executive Director of The Planetary Society and Project Director of Cosmos 1, said, "This long-anticipated and crucial milestone gives us the green light to begin final assembly of the spacecraft. If all goes well, we plan to ship the spacecraft to the launch preparation site near the port of Murmansk by the end of November."Cosmos 1's mission goal is to perform the first controlled solar sail flight. Solar sailing is the only known technology that may someday enable interstellar flight.Most spacecraft are launched from land, but Cosmos 1 will launch on a Volna rocket from a Russian submarine beneath the Barents Sea. A network of ground stations will track and receive data from the spacecraft after launch. The prime Russian stations are near Moscow, but additional tracking sites around the world include sites operated by US government agencies: the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the U.S. Air Force.NOAA's Satellite and Information Service will permit tracking from its site in Fairbanks, Alaska. The Air Force will provide optical pictures of the deployed sail from the Air Force Maui Optical and Supercomputing (AMOS) site at Haleakala, Hawaii. Other tracking sites include the University of California, Berkeley Space Science Laboratory ground station; two specially constructed portable stations for backup; and Panska Ves, a Czech ground station.Solar sailing is done not with wind, but with reflected light pressure - its push on giant sails can change orbital energy and spacecraft velocity continuously. Once injected into Earth's orbit, the sail will be deployed by inflatable tubes, which pull out the sail material and make the structure rigid. Cosmos 1 will have eight blades, configured like a giant windmill. The blades can be turned like helicopter blades to reflect sunlight in different directions. This enables the sail to "tack," tracking the sun and controlling the attitude of the spacecraft. Each blade measures 15 meters in length and is made from 5-micron-thin aluminized, reinforced Mylar -- about 1/4 the thickness of a trash bag.Several solar sail spacecraft have been proposed over the last few years, but none except Cosmos 1 has been built. NASA, the European and Japanese space agencies all have solar sail development programs, but no flights scheduled. NASA and ESA have conducted ground tests, and the Japanese space agency recently conducted a test of sail deployment on a sounding rocket."There are other private initiatives to convert long-established space technologies into commercial business ventures," said Ann Druyan, CEO of Cosmos Studios and Mission Program Director. "I believe Cosmos 1 is the first instance of a small business going for a revolutionary scientific and technological breakthrough in a wholly new mode of space travel. Cosmos Studios' goals are to generate new knowledge and to tell the inside story of how the 'Wright brothers' of today are changing our notion of the possible."Certification of readiness for launch will be conducted upon completion of spacecraft assembly and final testing. At that time a specific launch date will be selected, in coordination with the Russian Navy and the Makeev Rocket Design Center, which builds and operates the Volna rocket."We congratulate the very hard-working team at the Space Research Institute for the electronics delivery. They labored mightily to overcome difficulties in development and testing of key components and in handling software complications uncovered during tests of the complex behavior of a solar sail spacecraft," said Friedman."If Cosmos 1 succeeds, it will be visible throughout much of the world to the naked eye, a signal flare of hope for the wise use of science and high technology," said Druyan "Over the last four years I've imagined Cosmos 1's vast silvery sails unfurling in space countless times. If that does come to pass, it will be both a thing of beauty and a milestone of progress on the long human journey to the stars."The press can visit the following sites for comprehensive background materials on Cosmos 1: planetary.org/solarsail and solarsail.org.-o0o-The Planetary Society:The Planetary Society is headquartered in Pasadena, California, U.S.A. The organization was co-founded by Carl Sagan, Bruce Murray and Louis Friedman in 1980 to advance the exploration of the solar system, and to continue the search for extraterrestrial life. With a worldwide membership in over 140 countries, the Society is the largest private space interest group in the world.Cosmos Studios:Cosmos Studios was founded in 2000 by Ann Druyan, Joe Firmage and Kent Gibson, to create science-based entertainment designed to engage the broadest possible television, film and internet audience. Among its film projects is "Cosmic Journey," which has been nominated for the Emmy Award for the best long form science documentary, winner to be announced September 13th, 2004. Cosmos Studios is based in Los Angeles, California and is managed from Ithaca, New York.Web Links:The Planetary Society planetary.orgSolar Sail planetary.org/solarsail/Cosmos Studios solarsail.org or carlsagan.com "For Every Winner, There Are Dozens Of Losers. Odds Are You're One Of Them"
RickU

Re: Press Release from Ann Druyan & Planetary Society

Unread post

Awesome, awesome, awesome. In Vino Veritas
Post Reply

Return to “Pale Blue Dot: A Vision of the Human Future in Space - by Carl Sagan”