** The Official Space Flight Thread - The Space Station and Beyond **

One of those special pictures:

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Soyuz TMA-22 during a snow storm, yesterday morning before the launch.
 
The Russians have not yet given up on Phobos-Grunt:

“We estimate that the Phobos-Grunt will fly until January, and to make it perform its mission we still have time until the beginning of December,” head of Roscosmos Vladimir Popovkin told reporters.

Popovkin said the probe is moving along a 200-km orbit and has “communication windows” with ground control stations for about 2 minutes at a time.

In order to establish communications with Phobos-Grunt, the specialists reduced the power of the signal sent to the probe, since the first contact with the spacecraft was originally planned at a much higher trajectory, and widened the “communication window.”

and the rest:

http://en.rian.ru/science/20111114/168681455.html
 
The Soyuz spacecraft with Expedition 29/30 members Dan Burbank, Anton Shkaplerov and Anatoly Ivanishin has successfully docked with the ISS:

 
China's Shenzhou-8 spacecraft successfully docked with the mini space lab module Tiangong-1 for the second time on Monday (14th)


and returned safely to earth yesterday:


shenzhou8.jpg
 
The Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) mission flight readiness review meeting yesterday gave the “go” to continue working towards launch at 15:25 GMT (10:25 EST) next Friday, November 25th.

So let our countdown begin:



 
MSL has been delayed one day so that a safety system battery in the booster can be replaced. The launch is rescheduled for Saturday, November 26th at 15:02 GMT (10:02 EST).
 
Expedition 29 Commander Mike Fossum, Flight Engineers Satoshi Furukawa and Sergei Volkov have successfully landed their Soyuz TMA-02M spacecraft on the steppe of Kazakhstan at 02:26 GMT this morning, completing a five and a half month stay in space.

expedition29landing.jpg

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The astronomical window for Phobos-Grunt to land is now closed although it could still fly to Mars if recovered. The next window of opportunity to attempt the mission will be in 2014.

The time period when the lost Phobos-Ground interplanetary space station could be sent to Mars ends on Monday, November 21. There will be no sense in the attempts to establish connection with the spacecraft afterwards, a source at the Russian space industry told RIA Novosti. Even if the connection with Phobos-Ground is established after November 21, the station will not be able to fly to Mars, the source told the news agency.

"The solar batteries of the spacecraft have unfolded. Phobos-Ground is oriented at the Sun, and the ballistic window of the craft to fly to Mars is restricted with the date of November 21st," the source said.

Vladimir Popovkin, the head of Russia's Federal Space Agency Roskosmos, previously said that Phobos-Ground had not been lost. According to the official, the station will remain on orbit before the beginning of January. It would be possible to rehabilitate the spacecraft before the beginning of January, Popovkin said.

http://english.pravda.ru/russia/economics/21-11-2011/119687-phobos_ground-0/

More:

http://en.ria.ru/analysis/20111122/168929741.html
 
Got to be the picture of the month and the way to come home:

Expedition 29 Crew Lands

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Image Credit: NASA/Bill Ingalls
 
It's time to really get excited about MSL and look forward to launch on Saturday, November 26th at 15:02 GMT (10:02 EST).

 
Is recovery an option? From what i gathered it isn't in a stable orbit, and would re-enter within a few months?

It is a fall-back possibility. The launch window for Mars is supposed to span November and December so in the very unlikely scenario of it being connected again it would be a possibility to go to Mars but obviously not to Phobos as that window is now shut. In reality all must be considered lost and it will fall back to earth anytime between late December 2011 and February 2012.
 
The European Space Agency has said that a ground station in Australia heard signals from Phobos-Grunt so all may not yet be lost:


The European Space Operations Centre (Esoc) in Darmstadt reports that the contact was made at 2025 GMT on Tuesday. A spokesman said some modifications had been to the 15m dish facility in Perth to improve its chances of getting a signal.

He confirmed that telemetry from Phobos-Grunt was received, and that this data was passed straight to the Russians

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-15850516

http://en.rian.ru/science/20111123/168964040.html
 
The “GO” has been given for MSL launch on Saturday, November 26th at 15:02 GMT (10:02 EST). The forecast is 70% favourable for launch.

 
Yesterday's MSL rollout to the launch pad:

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The 197-foot-tall United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket arrives at the launch pad at Space Launch Complex 41 at Cape Canaveral:

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MSL launch today is at 15:02 GMT (10:02 EST)
 
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