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#20
by
ChrisGebhardt
on 01 Apr, 2019 15:55
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#21
by
Nicolas PILLET
on 01 Apr, 2019 17:08
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In the L2 document, there is still mention about AOS and LOS of Russian Ground Stations. But one would think this information is useless since the introduction of EKTS. It is not ?
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#22
by
Olaf
on 01 Apr, 2019 17:21
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Any information about small satellites on board?
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#23
by
anik
on 02 Apr, 2019 09:15
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Any information about small satellites on board?
There are no small satellites.
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#24
by
Olaf
on 02 Apr, 2019 15:11
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Thank you.
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#25
by
ChrisGebhardt
on 02 Apr, 2019 16:10
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In the L2 document, there is still mention about AOS and LOS of Russian Ground Stations. But one would think this information is useless since the introduction of EKTS. It is not ?
Telling controllers when to expect ground station LOS and AOS is not useless. They need to know when those things are expected. Orbital communication doesn't matter in that regard.
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#26
by
Rondaz
on 03 Apr, 2019 22:50
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Live on Thursday NASA TV Broadcasts Express Cargo Mission to Station
Mark Garcia Posted on April 3, 2019
NASA Television will provide live launch coverage of a Russian Progress cargo spacecraft carrying more than three-and-a-half tons of food, fuel and supplies for the Expedition 59 crew aboard the International Space Station. Watch live on NASA TV and the agency’s website beginning at 6:45 a.m. EDT.
The Progress 72 spacecraft is scheduled to launch from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan at 7:01 a.m. EDT (4:01 p.m. Baikonur time).
The Progress will orbit Earth twice then rendezvous with the station, where it will dock to the Pirs docking compartment on the Russian segment of the complex. Live coverage of its arrival and docking will begin at 9:45 a.m., with docking scheduled for 10:25 a.m.
The spacecraft will remain at the orbital outpost until late July.
https://blogs.nasa.gov/spacestation/2019/04/03/live-on-thursday-nasa-tv-broadcasts-express-cargo-mission-to-station/
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#27
by
Joachim
on 04 Apr, 2019 05:38
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I always thought the name of this freighter is Progress MS-11 - and not Progress 72 as NASA says.
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#28
by
Phillip Clark
on 04 Apr, 2019 07:01
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I always thought the name of this freighter is Progress MS-11 - and not Progress 72 as NASA says.
NASA's egotistical public affairs staff think that they have the right to rename non-US spacecraft: of course they don't and therefore these made-up NASA designators should be totally ignored by anyone who takes spaceflight seriously. The correct name is Progress-MS 11 (OK, I admit that I relocate the hyphen so the name makes more sense!) or Progress serial number 441.
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#29
by
Artyom.
on 04 Apr, 2019 08:21
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#30
by
Steven Pietrobon
on 04 Apr, 2019 09:32
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Video on Youtube.
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#31
by
Steven Pietrobon
on 04 Apr, 2019 09:34
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РОСКОСМОС
Verified account @roscosmos
6 minutes ago
In Less than an hour the direct broadcast of launch of the cargo ship #ПрогрессМС11 from Baikonur Baikonur will begin.
If you have questions about the upcoming launch, ask them in the comments under this publication, the answers to the best of them you will hear live!
twitter.com/roscosmos/status/1113734575467970560
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#32
by
Chris Bergin
on 04 Apr, 2019 09:53
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#33
by
Steven Pietrobon
on 04 Apr, 2019 10:04
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Livestream about to start.
РОСКОСМОС
Verified account @roscosmos
1 minute ago
#ProgressMS11: Live broadcast from the #Baikonur cosmodrome →
http://online.roscosmos.ru The launch is scheduled on April 4 at 11:01 UTC
twitter.com/roscosmos/status/1113743494030475264
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#34
by
Steven Pietrobon
on 04 Apr, 2019 10:06
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I think the stream in only on the Russian version of Youtube.
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#35
by
Steven Pietrobon
on 04 Apr, 2019 10:12
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Even at 480p, the video occasionally stops.
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#36
by
Steven Pietrobon
on 04 Apr, 2019 10:17
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T-45 minutes. Our Russian commentators.
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#37
by
Steven Pietrobon
on 04 Apr, 2019 10:19
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The second link on the page (CDN Video) seems to work better for me.
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#38
by
Steven Pietrobon
on 04 Apr, 2019 10:20
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Access towers coming down.
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#39
by
Steven Pietrobon
on 04 Apr, 2019 10:23
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T-40 minutes. About half way down.