[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  What a pity!  I was really excited about this!
  *sigh*
  Amy

  http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/cst-nws-solar22.html

  Russian space agency says solar launch failed

  June 22, 2005

  BY VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV ASSOCIATED PRESS


  MOSCOW - A joint Russian-U.S. project to launch a solar sail space vehicle
  crashed back to Earth when the booster rocket's engine failed less than
  two minutes after takeoff, the Russian space agency said Wednesday.

  The Cosmos 1 vehicle was intended to show that a so-called solar sail can
  make a controlled flight. Solar sails, designed to be propelled by
  pressure from sunlight, are envisioned as a potential means for achieving
  interstellar flight, allowing such spacecraft to gradually build up great
  velocity and cover large distances.

  But the Volna booster rocket failed 83 seconds after its launch from a
  Russian nuclear submarine in the northern Barents Sea just before midnight
  Tuesday in Moscow, the Russian space agency said.

  Its spokesman, Vyacheslav Davidenko, said that "the booster's failure
  means that the solar sail vehicle was lost." The Russian Defense Ministry
  launched a search for debris from the booster and the vehicle, he said.

  U.S. scientists had said earlier that they possibly had detected signals
  from the world's first solar sail spacecraft but cautioned that it could
  take hours or days to figure out exactly where the $4 million Cosmos 1 was.

  The signals were picked up late Tuesday after an all-day search for the
  spacecraft, which had suddenly stopped communicating after its launch,
  they said.

  "It's good news because we are in orbit - very likely in orbit," Bruce
  Murray, a co-founder of The Planetary Society, which organized the
  mission, said before the Russian space agency's announcement.

  A government panel will investigate possible reasons behind the failure of
  the three-stage rocket's first-stage engine, Davidenko said.

  Past attempts to unfold similar devices in space have failed.

  In 1999, Russia launched a similar experiment with a sun-reflecting device
  from its Mir space station, but the deployment mechanism jammed and the
  device burned up in the atmosphere.

  In 2001, Russia again attempted a similar experiment, but the device
  failed to separate from the booster and burned in the atmosphere.

  The project involved Russia's Lavochkin research production institute that
  built the vehicle and was financed by an organization affiliated to the
  U.S. Planetary Society.

  The solar sail vehicle weighed about 242 pounds and was designed to go
  into an orbit more than 500 miles high. It was designed to be powered by
  eight 49.5-foot-long sail structures resembling the blades of a windmill.

  Each blade can be turned to reflect sunlight in different directions so
  that the craft can "tack," much like a sailboat in the wind.

  Controlled flight would have been attempted early next week, and Cosmos 1
  was supposed to operate for at least a month.



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