China Daily

Russia plans for own space station

- By REN QI renqi@ chinadaily. com. cn

Russia will consider revising the terms of its participat­ion in the Internatio­nal Space Station, and begin deploying its own service orbital station after 2024, a senior Russian official said on Thursday.

Russian space agency Roscosmos said it will remain part of the ISS until 2024 and that it is open to extending its participat­ion beyond then.

“We have to reconsider the terms of further participat­ion in the ISS program and focus on the implementa­tion of orbital station programs,” Vladimir Solovyov, deputy head of the Energia Rocket and Space Corporatio­n, was quoted as saying by the Scientific Russia internet portal.

The state- run company oversees the Russian segment of the ISS, which was launched in 1998 by the Russian and US state space agencies.

Solovyov, who was speaking at a meeting of the Russian Academy of Sciences focusing on space, did not say whether Russia should quit the ISS before 2024.

On operationa­l matters, the ISS crew reported to Russia’s Flight Control Center on Oct 15 that the cosmonauts had found a possible air leak spot in the intersecti­on compartmen­t of the Zvezda module with the help of a tea bag.

In the account by the cosmonauts, the air was possibly leaking through a fracture. It has now been sealed under a temporary fix from what was available in the space station, the crew reported, providing an insight into some of the problems they have to contend with.

Solovyov said a lot of the equipment on the ISS was starting to age and that it needed to be replaced. He said there would be an “avalanche” of broken equipment there after 2025.

Russia may deploy its own service orbital station after 2024, Solovyov said of the facility that would be manned by up to four cosmonauts.

At the meeting, Solovyov presented details on the project to establish the Russian Orbital Service Station, or ROSS, which is under developmen­t by Energia.

He said the new station will comprise three to seven modules, and could be operated by a crew of two to four cosmonauts. The station will also be able to operate autonomous­ly.

“The cosmonauts will work on the station in shifts, in order to reduce the crew’s radiation exposure and operating costs,” Solovyov said.

According to Solovyov, the ROSS will serve a number of purposes, including remote probing, research, experiment­s, communicat­ions, navigation, man- made disaster detection, geological surveys, participat­ion in educationa­l projects, forestry monitoring and space tourism.

The achievemen­t of Russia’s main goals in space depends on the orbital space station programs, among other things, the official said. He added that the new station would confer advantages such as open architectu­re and an unlimited life- span, thanks to replaceabl­e modules.

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