2 Galileo Satellites Launched To Wrong Orbit 140
As reported by the BBC, two satellites meant to form part of the EU's Galileo global positioning network have been launched into a wrong, lower orbit, and it is unclear whether they can be salvaged. NASASpaceFlight.com has a more detailed account of the launch, which says [D]espite the Arianespace webcast noting no issue with the launch, it was later admitted the satellites were lofted into the wrong orbit. “Following the announcement made by Arianespace on the anomalies of the orbit injection of the Galileo satellites, the teams of industries and agencies involved in the early operations of the satellites are investigating the potential implications on the mission,” noted a short statement, many hours after the event. It is unlikely the satellites can be eased into their correct orbit, even with a large extension to their transit time. However, ESA are not classing the satellites as lost at this time. “Both satellites have been acquired and are safely controlled and operated from ESOC, ESA’s Operations Centre in Darmstadt, Germany,” the Agency added.
Over the course of the next "year or so," an additional 24 satellites are slated to complete the Galileo constellation, to be launched by a mixed slate of Ariane and Soyuz rockets.
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Dammit ESA, you had one job.
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The satellites were brought up by Russian Soyuz rockets.
I'm sure this mishap has nothing to do with EU sanctions against Russia and the crisis in the Ukraine.
Re:Proves point (Score:5, Interesting)
at least that's what my wife suggested when I asked her just now. And she actually is a rocket scientist...
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Re:Proves point (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Proves point (Score:5, Informative)
The final stage that was meant to put the two satellites into their proper orbit was a Fregat-MT upper stage built by the Russians and supplied as part of the complete Soyuz stack.
The satellites have their own motors used for station-keeping, trimming orbit etc. but I doubt they have enough fuel to move themselves to the planned orbit. Even in the wrong orbit the satellites will still work and provide position data to GPS receivers but they will not provide the sort of whole-sky coverage originally planned. They are high enough that they're not likely to deorbit within the next few years at least.
The complete Galileo constellation is intended to consist of twenty-four working satellites and six spares so ESA and the Galileo consortium have some leeway. They might revamp the deployment schedule to use fewer Soyuz launches and more Ariane V launches for the rest of the constellation though unless the Russians can explain what went wrong with the Fregat-TM and guarantee it won't happen again.
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One who wants it cheap, has to pay twice, isn't it?
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Enter our contest (Score:1)
assuming that these two birds were never intended for their advertised purpose, what is their actual purpose? Don't spend too much time on this one because the correct answer is pretty obvious.
Re:Enter our contest (Score:5, Funny)
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Oh man, and I'm without mod points today. Bravo, sir!
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Fourth try? That's a remarkably efficient track record. Thomas Alva Edison took around a thousand more tries to get inventions working. ;-)
"My parents call me Alvie. You can call me DC all the way."
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Actually, yes.
It's better for the vehicle to terminate the flight, than to just give it it's best shot.
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One must ask onesself, "It was a wrong orbit for who?" Perhaps it was the right orbit for some other purpose. A purpose that you aren't supposed to know, or even consider....
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I dont know much about satellites, but I do think thats how they work.
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Yeah, and Gene Roddenberry [wikipedia.org] wrote about faster than light space travel back in the 60's, but that didn't make it possible.
Cell phones can, under ideal conditions, transmit 30 to 40 miles [wikipedia.org], while a low earth orbit [wikipedia.org] is 99 miles up, and it would have to be directly overhead to be 99 miles away..>/p?
Fictional stories are fiction for a reason.
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Let me compensate for the paranoia and invoke Hanlon's razor on this one:
"Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity."
Re:Proves point (Score:4, Funny)
Sufficiently advanced stupidity is indistinguishable from malice, especially where large institutions are involved.
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Let me compensate for the paranoia...
Well then.
Let me compeNSAte for the paranoia...
(captcha: spooky)
Re:Proves point (Score:5, Informative)
Says the Anonymous coward...
This is the 2012 report, and a summary of success rates. You'll find the first American rocket as #7...
http://www.spacelaunchreport.c... [spacelaunchreport.com]
In 2013 the Atlas moved up to #4, Still after the Russian and EU.
http://www.spacelaunchreport.c... [spacelaunchreport.com]
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Take a closer look at that table. The US vehicles in 7-8 place have one and only one failure. The low ranking is because they are relatively new and have participated in a small number of missions.
In the 2nd table, showing retired vehicles the US has 3 of the top 4 spots.
Re:Proves point (Score:5, Funny)
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There is that.
I just realized (due to another /. post today) that the Atlas 5 is using the Russian built RD-180 engines.
Re:Proves point (Score:5, Funny)
Using alien technology. To film it in a Hollywood basement.
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Yet we tolerated the russian version?
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KSP (Score:2)
Just killing some kerbals
Good thing they didn't use SpaceX! (Score:1)
KABOOM!
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In all fairness, SpaceX is doing remarkably well for a start-up. Besides, their recent failure was an experimental test flight, not a launch.
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All together now: JUMP! (Score:2)
Just wait for the satellites to be overhead.
GPS (Score:1)
Maybe they should have used GPS :>
Netbot the dudes using the ... (Score:2)
... Low Orbit Ion Canon.
ugh (Score:5, Interesting)
I'll never understand these idiotic mistakes made by space agencies.
Remember when the spirit rover mission almost failed because they never did a real test of the OS's file system?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S... [wikipedia.org]
After I heard about that, all I could think of was "Why would you spend billions of dollars on something, send it to mars, and never simulate the trip to see if the OS would have a problem?"
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The Fregat has a reputation as being an incredibly reliable and accurate upper stage - I have heard of on-orbit accuracies on the order of 100 meters - and there were no initial reports of upper stage technical problems (such as a premature shutdown). That tells me that this is likely to be either a communications problem, or a simple screwup.
Stupid metric system (Score:5, Funny)
if they had used Engrish units this never would have happened.
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In fact 'imperial' system is stupid. It is even retarded. ...
12 inches to 1 foot, 3 feets to 1 yard, 1760 yards to 1 mile,
This is just moronic.
Compare to 1km = 1000m = 100000cm
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In fact 'imperial' system is stupid. It is even retarded. ...
12 inches to 1 foot, 3 feets to 1 yard, 1760 yards to 1 mile,
This is just moronic.
Compare to 1km = 1000m = 100000cm
My theory is that the illiterate medieval peasants who invented those systems had an intuitive knowledge that a duodecimal number system would make a lot more sense than decimal, and they ended up creating various half-assed implementations of it for their measurements. (The mile thing is different; it's a Roman decimal measurement of steps).
Unfortunately we did end up using decimal, and reinforced it with Arabic numerals, which makes those intuitions worse than useless in the modern world.
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I work on a lot of machinery. To cover a span of 1" or 24mm, I need almost half-again as many mm-sized tools as I need SAE-sized tools at 1/16" increments, and I can't omit any metric sizes because there's no rule that I've found on where one can go from x1mm to x2mm or x3mm spacing between fasteners. With SAE tools, once above 1-3/8, typically one only needs
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What a load of rubbish. Celsius are intuitive for those who grew up with them.
And regarding tools, sure when all your tools are made to imperial standards, it's quite a surprise when working with them are easier than trying to do convert them to metric...
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I just said that I need half-again as many SI tools as SAE tools. Wouldn't that indicate that I carry and use SI tools, and work on SI machines?
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That doesn't mean they're better.
Standardization and a logically defined system with strict rules does mean SI is better.
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Time.
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The fact that the SI has a flaw that the imperial system also has does not make the SI inferior or equal.
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For the record, I'm perfectly fine with SI being the principal units system for scientific research, in the sense that once one leaves day-to-day use it doesn't matter terribly much. On the other hand, SI has proven, in scientific terms, to itself be flawed. Attempts to redefine the base units using natural constants aren't finished either. That means now all you have is an easy conversion system.
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What's wrong with the radian?
Pi is a universal constant. Furthermore, its value is irrelevant in most calculations, being simply a placeholder. When the value is needed, using as much precision as needed is trivial.
You know why the imperial system is more flawed than the SI? It's defined in terms of SI units. It's a stopgap solution for those too lazy to standardize.
Failure to define units in terms of universal constants is not exclusive to SI, considering the imperial system never made such an attempt (and
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Any measurement system that requires you to use decimals for reasonable accuracy in common situations is the wrong increment and if this is common when using the measurement it's just a bad system for that reason.
For example, measuring the height of a human being requires the use of feet and Inches in Imperial measurements but generally uses nice clean numbers in centimeters for the same accuracy. This occurs frequently for certain measurement cases where cm/mm are better, but there are just as many situati
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And that in a nutshell is my beef with SI. The idea for unifying the units for conversion/comparison of natura
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Surely you're kidding...
I challenge you to tell the difference between 21 degrees Celsius and 22 degrees Celsius in real life. What kind of accuracy do you need? One degree will not make the difference between "I should take a sweater" and "nice warm day".
For every situation where you get a nice integer by using feet there's at least one where you get a nice integer using meters with whatever prefix you desire.
The whole point of the SI is to demystify manipulations that change between "adjacent" units. Feel
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That's actually a really good point, and it's been a pain point for me for years without realizing the why of it.
But then you go and ruin it with this: To cover a span of 1" or 24mm.
1" = 25.4mm, IIRC.
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Spare the moronic excuses.
You do not need tools at every mm value.
0 degrees Celsius is the freezing point of water, 100 the boiling point. How much more intuitive does it need to be?
Are you too stupid to use numbers from 0 to 100 with centimeters? Is "50 centimeters" too much for your head?
The scales aren't "off". There's nothing to be off! A scale is not better because it maps to a few arbitrary values nicely.
A scale is worse if you have different rules for different units. How many inches in a mile? I'd h
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"How many inches in a mile? I'd have to think about it or memorize it. "
How many radians in a complete revolution? You CAN'T memorize it, it's an irrational number with an infinite number of digits.
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I hope that's a joke.
I do not need to know the value of pi in many cases - it serves as a sort of placeholder. When I do need it, I do not need infinite precision.
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The boiling and freezing point of water doesn't do anything for me in my day-to-day life. The scant number of times per year that I need to boil water it's a matter of put
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I don't really ever need to know how many inches are in a mile. Things measured in miles do not need the precision of inches. They don't usually even need the precision of feet. Things measured in kilometers do not need the precision of millimeters, or centimeters, or decimeters, or usually even meters the vast majority of the time.
Do not generalize. An airplane's wing is many meters long, yet its tolerances are in the mm range or smaller.
Some application do benefit from being able to freely mix prefixed units. Since having two incompatible systems is stupid, it makes sense to standardize around the better system.
Do not mistake SI for people who cannot standardize on a few sizes of hex heads for screws. It's unfortunate, but bad decisions are everywhere.
The system is absolutely superior as already detailed. "Everyday life" is a matter
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An aircraft's wing is in meters, not in Kilometers. It's expansion and contraction due to temperature and aerodynamic stresses causes it to change length more than a centimeter during operation.
Besides, SI has no monopol
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Yep the problem with your world only comes when you need to work outside your world. Why not start thinking what the world would look like if you had to do more than just drill a hole. Josh Bazell put it well in one of his novels (a photo of which is making the rounds on the net at the moment):
In metric, one cubic centimetre of water weighs one gram, and requires one calorie of energy to heat up by one degree centigrade 0 which is 1 percent of the difference between its freezing point and it's boiling point
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" Perhaps that is simply because you are not use to Celsius?
0F was suppose to be the coldest Fahrenheit could get. He used brine of am
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For temperatures, the Celcius is much more usefull and intuitive than Farenhight becaue Celcius is based on important milestones. What is the difference between -1F and 1F? One really really cold and the other is also really really cold, there is no difference, the 0F doesn't mark any intuitive usefull milestone. The zero degrees Celcius on the other hand, is a very important milestone, the temperature in which water freezes. You can intuitively see the difference between -1C and 1C by noting the presence (
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Wimp. -20F is quite bearable with a nice warm coat, and I've been out in -30F weather dressed like that (I didn't enjoy it, but I could stand it). There are communities a couple hundred miles north of me where -40 and below happen now and then, and they don't close everything down.
Is your idea of "special clothing" scarf and gloves?
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Not quite - it's more that there were a number of different units for different purposes and different locations - inches and feet and rods and yards and chains and furlongs and fathoms, etc. (and these are just for length - there are acres and oxgangs and virgates etc. for area, and on and on). Over time, some of these dropped out and the others got rationalized, leading to a bunch of different ratios.
At least some of the duodecimal units (and I believe all of the base 360 units, such as degrees) are stra
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wouldn't that be .6096 left-m?
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Trisecting a line segment. Dang old white bastards reading their freaky Greek.
http://jwilson.coe.uga.edu/EMT668/EMAT6680.2000/Lehman/emat6690/trisecttri%27s/triseg.html
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Nah. It's due to the ongoing shrinking of the Euro vs other currencies. That 10 million euro in fuel just didn't go far enough.
What a debacle (Score:5, Interesting)
This will for sure mess up the constellation, which is designed to minimize the times where some places on Earth do not have 4 satellites above the horizon, and also the places where this is going to happen (i.e., coverage gaps over the far South Pacific are likely to be more acceptable than over Northern Europe) . Since these satellites are too low, they will have shorter periods and will thus not be commensurable with the existing constellation, and will drift in and out of place.
You can be sure ESA engineers are busily looking at orbits this weekend, to see what can be salvaged from this debacle. Now, they may be really lucky, and have gotten an orbit where these two satellites can be used to fill a hole in the current constellation. I would bet in that case that both satellites would serve to fill the spots normally filled by one satellite; so at best only one, but if (as is more likely) they are unlucky, two satellites will have to be launched to fill the gaps.
In other words, while these satellites are not a loss, and will be used, new launches are likely to be necessary to make the constellation whole, which will cost as much as if they were lost.
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The problem with a lower orbit is that it's also a faster orbit. And it's not going to be a nice 3:2 faster orbit. Hence, these birds will move all over the place relative to the others. "Lucky" just won't happen.
But until the entire system is up and running, Galileo will have gaps in its coverage, and these satellites may reduce the size and duration of those gaps. And for multi-system receivers it's even less of a deal.
Forgot to use Metric (Score:1)
Maybe they forgot to use Metric? Oh wait, the satellites would have ended up in Martian orbit if they had done that.
Is it too late? (Score:2)
Most major GPS chip sets now actively filter pulsar noise. The thing about pulsars is they are better clocks than what is being launched and they transmit on all frequencies. The ephemeris calculations are much harder but it has be used to 2 meter accuracy and it isn't even limited to working just around earth. I wonder why they spent so much money to duplicate two existing systems that weren't even state of the art when they started. Maybe it was because you can't license pulsar transmissions.
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Most major GPS chip sets now actively filter pulsar noise.
Got a link for that? I know that most pulsar observers filter out GPS and other satnavs (GLONASS sidebands are especially annoying) but I have not heard of GPS receivers having pulsar ephemerides.
The thing about pulsars is they are better clocks than what is being launched and they transmit on all frequencies. The ephemeris calculations are much harder but it has be used to 2 meter accuracy and it isn't even limited to working just around earth. I wonder why they spent so much money to duplicate two existing systems that weren't even state of the art when they started. Maybe it was because you can't license pulsar transmissions.
Or maybe because observing pulsars requires a substantially bigger antenna than a hand-held smart-phone - 170 m^2 (and 500 Watts!) for a phased-array radio dipole and 0.1 m^2 for an X-ray Pulsar Nav system in Becker et al. [arxiv.org] (and the latter could only be used in space, outside the Earth's atmosphere).
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Radio astronomers are look at pulsars a different way than a Galaxy Position System needs to.
The pulsar interference issues came up shortly after the industry found out that Trimble was making use of the short bit at the end of the message to figure out when a frame started on the military signal which gave them much better accuracy. The pulsar noise messes up the way that was found so it had to be filtered out and those filters helped clean up other noise issues. That was over 15 years ago and I haven't
Use the GPS (Score:2)
This is what they get for not using a GPS. It's not rocket science!
Space upgrade of classic flying problem? (Score:2)
Is this the space version of Controlled Flight Into Terrain? All the other mishaps I can recall were equipment failures, barring the satellite collision.
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I suspect it will be like the 1999 Mars Climate Orbiter - "what we've got here is a failure to communicate."
Interesting difference between GPS and Galileo (Score:2)
Unlike existing GPS, Galileo has an interactive "search and rescue" function that can interact with the unit on the ground.
Given how infrequently this would be useful in the grand scheme of things - and the likely higher power requirements over passive GPS - the paranoid person in me wonders if the real reason this was included is because spy agencies requested it. With GPS being passive, taking advantage of it to locate a target requires a second piece of software be loaded onto the device.
Re:Interesting difference between GPS and Galileo (Score:4, Informative)
Remember: Space is hard (Score:2)
I got it! (Score:1)
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Why? They are testing a new launch system, mistakes happen and you learn from them.
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Never mind, wrong post.
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Re: fuel reserves (Score:2)
Depends. If in the same orbital plane, but just too low, it might be doable. If put into a lower orbit _and_ different orbital plane, it's another venture alltogether. Plus, you'd probably loose the ability to deorbit. If they can still be useful in their current orbits, I'd leave them there.
Re:fuel reserves (Score:4, Interesting)
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https://www.google.co.uk/?gfe_... [google.co.uk]
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