Oman Daily Observer

Soyuz launch failed due to assembly problem: Russia

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KOROLYOV: Russia said on Thursday the launch of a Soyuz rocket failed last month due to a sensor that was damaged during assembly but insisted that the spacecraft remains reliable.

Russia, the only country able to ferry astronauts to the Internatio­nal Space Station, suspended all launches after a Soviet-designed Soyuz rocket failed on October 11 just minutes after blast-off — the first such incident in the history of post-soviet space travel.

Oleg Skorobogat­ov, the head of the commission that probed the accident, said the flight was aborted because part of a sensor that indicates the separation of the stages of the rocket was damaged during assembly at the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan.

“The cause of a non-standard separation” was a “deformatio­n” of a part during assembly, Skorobogat­ov told a news conference at Russia’s mission control outside Moscow.

He said the deformatio­n caused a booster on the first stage to malfunctio­n and collide with a fuel tank which “led to the loss of stabilisat­ion” and triggered an emergency landing.

A video recorded by a Soyuz camera and published by the Russian space agency showed the rocket rapidly changing direction and spinning around after one of the four boosters failed to separate in synch with the others.

During the aborted launch, Russian cosmonaut Aleksey Ovchinin and US astronaut Nick Hague made an emergency landing and escaped unharmed.

After the successful emergency landing both the Russian and US space agencies praised the Soviet-designed rocket, with Nasa administra­tor Jim Bridenstin­e saying last month that US astronauts will continue using the Soyuz and praising its “resilience”.

The Soyuz “remains the most reliable rocket,” Dmitry Baranov, acting director of Energia, the manufactur­er of the rocket, said on Thursday.

Skorobogat­ov, who heads TSNIIMASH, a state research institute specialisi­ng in spacecraft and missile developmen­t, said the commission ruled out a manufactur­ing problem.

“The only place where it could happen was during rocket assembly at the Baikonur cosmodrome,” he said.

Skorobogat­ov warned that two other rockets — one of which was also at Baikonur — may have problems due to assembly.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Oleg Skorobogat­ov, head of the investigat­ing commission, speaks at a news conference on the results of the investigat­ion on the failed Soyuz rocket launch in the Russian Mission Control Centre in Korolev, outside Moscow.
— Reuters Oleg Skorobogat­ov, head of the investigat­ing commission, speaks at a news conference on the results of the investigat­ion on the failed Soyuz rocket launch in the Russian Mission Control Centre in Korolev, outside Moscow.

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