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On 2 July, a Proton-M transport rocket, launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome, failed a minute after lift-off. Over the past two and a half years, this is the seventh failed Russian space launch. See our infographic for the specifications of the Proton-M rocket. The Proton-M heavy-duty Launch Vehicle (LV) is designed to launch an unmanned spacecraft into Earth orbit and then into space. The Khrunichev State Research and Production Space Centre developed the vehicle, which Roskosmos uses to launch Russian and foreign government and commercial spacecraft. Proton-M is the workhorse of the Russian space programme; at present, it’s carrying the GLONASS satellite system and Ekpress communications satellites, which will provide coverage all over Russia. Read more >> For now, Proton-M launches are on hold, after two or three days, it’ll be clear what happened to the rocket. Indeed, it’s a fairly straightforward and well-proven piece of equipment. A space programme source said, “It’s clear that it wasn’t a glitch with the rocket; it was human error”.
On the possible causes of the Proton accident >>
Other Russian space failures in 2005-13 >>
2 July 2013
RIA-Novosti
http://ria.ru/infografika/20130702/947036250.html
http://en.ria.ru/infographics/20130702/182009409/Proton-Carrier-Rocket.html
Click here for more on the Proton-M Baikonur launch failure
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