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ZL2VAL > SAREX 08.12.01 07:17l 92 Lines 3426 Bytes #999 (0) @ WW
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Subj: ISS Amateur Radio Status 12/6/01
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From: ZL2VAL@ZL2TZE.#73.MLB.NZL.OC
To : SAREX@WW
ISS Amateur Radio Status: December 6, 2001
New ISS crew and call signs
Kolibri-2000 satellite
ISS and Shuttle Visible
Space Tourists?
By Miles Mann WF1F,
MAREX-NA News
Manned Amateur Radio Experiment, North American Division
New ISS Crew:
STS-108 is in the sky, look for STS-108, following ISS.
This mission will deliver a new crew to ISS. The Space Shuttle Endeavor
will deliver the Expedition Four Crew with Commander Yuri Onufrienko
RK3DUO of Rosaviakosmos (formally called RSA Russian Space Agency) and
American Flight Engineers Carl Walz KC5TIE and Dan Bursch KD5PNU. The
current ISS crew, Expedition Three will return to earth, astronaut
commander Frank Culbertson, Cosmonaut Vladimir Dezhurov, Cosmonaut
Mikhail Tyurin.
Today Cosomonaut Yuri Onufrienko received his new Russian Amateur Radio
license. Since postal mail is only delivered to ISS every few months,
he will get the news of his new radio call sign by radio message. So if
you happen to hear Yuri on the air using the club call R0ISS, tell him
his new call has arrived, RK3DUO.
http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/shuttle/
Both Shuttle and ISS Visible:
Check your tracking programs.
http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/shuttle/
If you do not have a tracking program, please check the NASA web pages
for tracking and Visibility data. There have been several good reports
of very bright reflections from ISS.
http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/realdata/index.html
http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/realdata/sightings/SSapplications/Post/SightingDatai
/sghting_index.html
Kolibri-2000 satellite
Next winter there will be a new amateur radio satellite launched during
a cargo mission to ISS. The new satellite called Kolibir-2000, will be
taken into space by a Russian Progress cargo rocket (Currently docked to
ISS). The Kolibri-2000 will then stay in space attached to a remote
launching port on the Progress rocket until approximately February
2002. The Kolibiri will then be remotely launched into space from the
Progress rocket and fee-fall back to earth over the next 2-4 months.
During the Kolibri's free-fall, it will send back telemetry and digital
voice recordings. One of the down link frequencies will be 145.825.
ISS "Kolibri-2000" - Russian-Australian School Scientific-Research
Microsatellite
http://www.iki.rssi.ru/kollibri/mission1_e.htm
Space Tourists?
Do you remember last years ISS tourist, Denis Tito? We'll, it seems
there is another Space Tourist training for a mission during the Summer
of 2002. The Rumors are that he is a South African and he will be flown
to ISS for a short mission via a Soyuze Rocket. I also asked about the
Survivor-ISS contest, and was told, "Lots of paper work". So I guess we
can NOT expect a Survivor-ISS TV show this fall, darn.
73 Miles WF1F MAREX-NA
www.marex-na.org
wf1f@amsat.org
Copyright 2001 Miles Mann, All Rights Reserved. This document may be
freely distributed via the following means - Email (including listservers),
Usenet, and World-Wide-Web. It may not be reproduced for profit including,
but not limited to, CD ROMs, books, and/or other commercial outlets
without prior written consent from the author.
Until we meet again
DOSVIDANIYA Miles WF1F
----
PS,
If you wish to correspond with Miles, use the e-mail address above.
Do *NOT* reply to him via packet with "SR" command as it'll only land on
my packet terminal!! Alan, ZL2VAL
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