alexpgp: (Corfu!)
[personal profile] alexpgp
Yesterday, the Intelsat spacecraft was loaded with oxidizer. This is a process that takes pretty much all day, and as far as the safety personnel are concerned, the fewer persons in the vicinity, the better. (Sentences like that always seem to sound ominous... I still remember how Dan Rather made a routine evacuation drill undertaken by a new Mir space station crew sound like evidence of just how hazardous the station was, when the fact of the matter was that new crews are required to do such drills as part of the standard procedure, the way school kids do fire drills. But I digress...)

I was part of the majority of folks who had other things to do, anyway. First on the plan was a trip out to the pad with some of the technicians who were to do some last-minute work on the rocket prior to liftoff. When we got to the pad, the service tower was in place over the launch base, which is the platform the rocket will actually sit on when erected. The service tower itself is a fairly spare structure, mounted on rails, with a set of "arms" that swing out and in. Photography at yesterday's session was "categorically" forbidden, but I'm sure I'll get a shot of the tower before the campaign is over. After achieving the goals of the session, everyone returned to the hotel.

The original time we'd been quoted for the Progress launch was in Moscow time, which is two hours behind us (4:34 pm there is 6:34 pm here), so consequently, the departure time for the bus to the launch site was moved accordingly. It turns out the launch site is close (relatively speaking) to the museum; the bus turned and stopped next to a helicopter pad about half a mile down the road.

I was not surprised to find we were the only people there. What was surprising was our relative proximity to the pad, which the consensus around here says was less than a kilometer. (It's difficult to judge, as there are no visual cues on the landscape to go by, as is the case, say, at KSC.) Soon, however, other buses started to arrive. Two of those buses appeared to be filled with high schoolers, who soon discovered and began to mingle with members of our team.

Spectators at Progress launch, 5/25/04

Waiting for a rocket to launch is a little like waiting for a kettle of water to boil on a stove. In the interim, John P. pointed out the behavior of a ground wasp to me.

The insect was apparently finishing the excavation of a cavity in the ground when John knelt down to photograph it. At that moment, the wasp flew off and I figured it was because it had detected John's presence. I was wrong. A few minutes later, the insect returned carrying a caterpillar. A fat one. An immobile one.

In a flash, the prey (which the wasp lays eggs in, according to John) was dragged into the hole and the wasp emerged momentarily to begin energetically backfilling the opening, vibrating its wings to compact the dusty dirt. Off to the side, someone had picked a twig from some of the sparse vegetation that surrounded us and confirmed that we were standing in a field of wild rosemary.

As the minutes counted down, someone else noticed that the wind was blowing directly into our faces from the launch pad. This fact could be of great significance if Something Bad™ happened during or soon after liftoff, and everyone made a mental note of where to go (think: crosswise to the wind). This is the equivalent of actually turning around to look at the closest exit when you're a passenger on an airplane.

Finally, the moment came. As opposed to the official viewing area at KSC, where there is a big clock and a PAO voice to provide a little color commentary, or even the viewing area at last year's Mars Express launch, where loudspeakers provided audio from one of the console operators in the bunker, at yesterday's launch, you simply had to stay alert. The first indication something was about to happen occurred when the umbilical tower was retracted; then, another piece of equipment fell away. Suddenly, there was a rumble that seemed to come from deep within the ground and you could see some exhaust appear to the right of the rocket.

Then the Soyuz rocket broke free of the earth and roared its way heavenward.

Soyuz carrying Progress M-49 lifts off from Baikonur, Kazakhstan, 5/25/04

John had wanted me to get a shot of him watching the liftoff, but by the time I had repositioned myself, the Soyuz had already gained some serious altitude, so we all settled down and craned our necks as the Soyuz went directly up and then engaged its programming to pitch over onto its side and head thataway (eastward, away from us), using both its engines and the velocity imparted by the Earth's rotation to deliver its payload into orbit. We lost sight of the rocket after it had climbed above a layer of cirrus clouds up there at jet-stream level.

With that, everyone headed back to their respective buses (other groups had arrived as well). On the road home, our driver passed the buses with the high schoolers, and everyone waved at each other, smiling. It was an excellent launch.

Cheers...

Date: 2004-05-26 03:51 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wealth.livejournal.com
My congratulations! You did an excellent work...

Date: 2004-05-26 03:58 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alexpgp.livejournal.com
Thanks for the kind words, but I was just a spectator!

Cheers...

Date: 2004-05-26 04:12 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wealth.livejournal.com
By you I meant everyone in your team ;-). For me (a native russian) it's always great to know that something still works in my country, especially rockets like Soyuz.

Date: 2004-05-26 12:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alexpgp.livejournal.com
Безусловно, Союз - классная ракета. Но наша команда работает по программе "Интелсат-Х," пуск которого назначен для 16-ого июня на РН "Протон." Вчера мы на самом деле все были зрительями.

Cheers...

Date: 2004-05-26 06:15 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] wealth.livejournal.com
Ваш русский подкупает своей правильностью. Я наивно полагал, что Вы участвовали в запуске "Союза". Обязательно расскажите о своей программе (может быть Вы уже говорили, но я пропустил эти посты). Безумно интересно.
С уважением,
Максим.

Date: 2004-05-26 04:21 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] love337.livejournal.com
Success! I love you! We're thinking of you!

Date: 2004-05-26 12:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alexpgp.livejournal.com
Well, it's a success of a sort... we actually had nothing to do with the work that went into yesterday's launch. We were literally there as spectators (rocket people are like that... they attend each other's launches). We still have our work cut out for us before we launch the Intelsat 10 satellite in mid-June.

I love you too, kiddo.

Cheers...

Date: 2004-05-26 06:15 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bandicoot.livejournal.com
Soyuz rocket? ;)

Date: 2004-05-26 01:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] alexpgp.livejournal.com
Yes. It's a little confusing, but Energia builds Soyuz and Progress vehicles and launches them on Soyuz rockets. The Proton, which is the rocket our satellite will be on top of when it flies, is launched by the Khrunichev Research Center.

The relation between Energia and Khrunichev is competitive, and is approximately in the same relation as between Boeing and Lockheed-Martin back home.

There are a few other launch vehicles, including the Tsiklon (manufactured by Yuzhnoe Design Bureau in Ukraine) and the Zenit, which I believe also belongs to Energia.

Cheers...

Date: 2004-05-26 04:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bandicoot.livejournal.com
I'd always thought the Soyuz was launched on Protons. I think they need to straighten out their branding ;)

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