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Scientists
rehearse for Foton mission
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Foton-M
spacecraft becomes fully automated after injection into
orbit
Credits:
ESA
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1 March 2007 Over 60
scientists and technicians have taken up temporary residence in
ESA's brand new microgravity science laboratory, where, for the
coming days, they will rehearse procedures to prepare experiments
for the Foton M3 mission later this year.
Scheduled for
launch on 14 September 2007 from Baikonur Cosmodrome, Kazakhstan,
the unmanned Foton M3 mission will carry 35 ESA experiments in
life and physical sciences. The Foton capsule will spend 12 days
orbiting the Earth, exposing the experiments to microgravity, and
in the case of some experiments, to the harsh environment of open
space, before re-entering the atmosphere and landing in the
border zone between Russia and the Kazakhstan.
The science teams behind the
mission's biology experiments are currently gathered at ESTEC,
ESA's research and technology centre, in Noordwijk, the
Netherlands, to practice the preparation of their samples and
flight hardware - an important part of the time-critical
countdown to launch.
Punctual
departure
The simulation - known as the
‘Science Verification Test’ - will exactly follow the
timeline planned for the real flight in September. Counting back
from the launch, which is expected on the afternoon of Friday 14
September, the ground crew in Baikonur will have precisely 24
hours a couple of days before the launch (from T-72h to T-48h) in
which to install the payloads in the Foton capsule.
Preparing biology experiments
in the new microgravity lab at ESTEC
"To reach Baikonur in time
for installation in the Foton capsule all the experiment
containers will have to leave Noordwijk no later than 2 am on
Monday 10 September," explains René Demets, ESA
project biologist. A truck will take 2-tonnes of cargo directly
from ESTEC to Rotterdam Airport. From there a chartered aircraft
will fly the experiments to Samara, in Russia. After customs
clearance and refuelling, the journey will continue to the remote
launch site in Baikonur.
“For biology experiments
the samples need to be prepared as late as possible,” adds
Demets. “By gathering the scientists at ESTEC there will be
five days between sample preparation and launch, giving the
scientists the latest possible access to their experiments. It
means that the teams will have to work day and night over the
weekend to prepare their cell cultures and be ready and packed
for a punctual departure early on the Monday morning."
Corrective
action
Running through those procedures ahead
of time gives the teams a chance to iron out any problems before
the procedures are done for real in the autumn. Any mistakes or
problems could put an experiment in jeopardy.
Preparing
biology experiments for the Foton M3 mission in the new
microgravity lab at ESTEC, in Noordwijk, The Netherlands.
Foton M3 is scheduled for launch in September 2007. The
unmanned capsule will spend 12 days orbiting the Earth
exposing it's payload of experiments to microgravity. At the
end of the mission the capsule will re-enter Earth's
atmosphere to land in the border zone between Russia and
Kazakhstan.
Credits:
ESA - S. Muirhead
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"What we might do
wrong in the preparation stage can lead an experiment to fail,"
says Michel Lazerges, ESA project manager for the eEristo/eOsteo
experiment, which investigates the influence of microgravity on
bone cell biology. "By testing and verifying everything in
advance we push uncertainty to the last. If anything shows up
during the rehearsal, we can take corrective action and make sure
we have it right for the flight."
For the
same reason, as in September when there will be no room for
errors, the simulation will continue when the rest of ESTEC has
closed down for the weekend. "We want to test the
infrastructure fully," says Demets. "We need to know
that we can work under these circumstances. How, for example,
will we feed all these people during the weekend when the ESTEC
canteen is not available?"
New
laboratory
For Peter Schiller, manager of
the microgravity science laboratory, this is also an exciting
time. The Foton dress rehearsal will be the first wide-scale use
of the brand new facility. "For us this is a chance to check
out the new lab and to make sure that it fulfils its functions,"
explains Schiller.
After
completion of the Science Verification Test, the next major
milestone for the Foton M3 mission will be the Mission Simulation
Test due to take place at ESTEC in April. During this test the
system used to remotely control and monitor the experiments
during the mission will be put through its paces.
Source
/ Credit: ESA

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