Return-path: X-Andrew-Authenticated-as: 7997;andrew.cmu.edu;Ted Anderson Received: from corsica.andrew.cmu.edu via trymail for +dist+/afs/andrew.cmu.edu/usr1/ota/space/space.dl@andrew.cmu.edu (->+dist+/afs/andrew.cmu.edu/usr1/ota/space/space.dl) (->ota+space.digests) ID ; Tue, 29 Aug 89 00:22:22 -0400 (EDT) Message-ID: Reply-To: space+@Andrew.CMU.EDU From: space-request+@Andrew.CMU.EDU To: space+@Andrew.CMU.EDU Date: Tue, 29 Aug 89 00:22:06 -0400 (EDT) Subject: SPACE Digest V10 #0 SPACE Digest Volume 10 : Issue 0 Today's Topics: Progress M-1 (new type of cargo craft) launched to USSR's Mir station space news from July 31 AW&ST NASA Prediction Bulletins ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 24 Aug 89 01:09:06 EDT From: Glenn Chapman Subject: Progress M-1 (new type of cargo craft) launched to USSR's Mir station The Soviets announced on Radio Moscow (Aug. 23) the launching of a new cargo carrier, Progress M1, to the Mir/Kvant space station. This will dock at the rear (Kvant) docking port in about 2 days. It is carrying supplies to the station in preparation for the remanning of Mir. Note that this is the first of the updated series of Progress tankers, though no mention of what the changes were. However, these are probably similar to the upgrading of the Soyuz T series to the Soyuz TM capsules now used by the cosmonauts. Progresses were originally developed after the 1973 failure of a Salyut station (Kosmos 557) which caused entire propellent supply to be lost (according to an interview with K.A. Kerimov, chairman of Manned Space Complexes, quoted by Nicholas Johnson in the "The Soviet Year in Space, 1988). The original series began with Progress 1 flight to the Salyut 6 space station on Jan 20, 1978. These 7 Tonne vehicles carried about 1.3 Tonnes of dry supplies and 1 Tonne of fuel/water/air. In July 19, 1985 Kosmos 1669 was launched and stated to be a Progress type vehicle which docked with Salyut 7. The subsequent Progress 25 was an upgraded vehicle, with a maximum cargo of 2.5 Tonnes; up to 1.4 Tonnes of dry and 1.2 tonnes of wet (but not both could be used to the full amount). The current new series of Progress was announced in 1988, but speculation has centered on a vehicle with a return capsule to bring materials processing samples down in at least one version and the use of a Zenit (SL-16 or J class) booster, which could put up to 15 tonnes in orbit. No statements on the launcher or the size of the Progress M-1 have been made. The primary and backup Soyuz TM-8 crew also arrived on Aug. 24th at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in preparation for their Sept. 6 flight to Mir. The crew will be spending 6 months in orbit. No mention has been made about the repair of the power system on the station, which began to show problems in April. Mir has been unmanned for the past 119 days, since Soyuz TM-7 left on Apr. 27. Note though that the ground control has been maintained because on Aug. 22 they announced a new series of observations taken by the Kvant astrophysics module X-ray telescope of a neutron star. Soon the Earth will again have a manned space station. With Aviation Week and Defense Daily describing the possible substantial reductions in the Freedom station it may be that Mir will exceed the NASA/International station this year when the expansion module is launched in October. Do you really want that? Glenn Chapman MIT Lincoln Lab ------------------------------ Date: 29 Aug 89 01:09:51 GMT From: mailrus!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!utgpu!utzoo!henry@tut.cis.ohio-state.edu (Henry Spencer) Subject: space news from July 31 AW&ST DARPA awards small contract to Space Data Corp of Arizona to develop and demonstrate a small launcher with a payload of 1000-1500 lbs to polar orbit. Bush endorses NSC recommendation to slip Aerospace Plane program 2.5 years. Hubble telescope moved out of storage for tests, in preparation for shipment to KSC. Pan American Satellite (the first privately-owned operator of international comsat links) has filed an antitrust suit against Comsat Corp, alleging abuse of Comsat's dominant position in Intelsat. Panamsat says Comsat has conspired with foreign governments to prevent Panamsat from expanding its transatlantic service at a time when Intelsat had no spare capacity, is pricing its services below cost to try to keep Panamsat out of the market, and is telling potential Panamsat customers that Panamsat will be unable to gain authorization to serve them. Comsat, naturally, says this is all nonsense. Mitsubishi Heavy Industries expects to start testing an experimental liquefied-air-cycle engine, based on Japan's LE-5 oxyhydrogen rocket engine, this year. This will be a proof-of-concept design for the basic notion -- using liquid hydrogen fuel to liquefy atmospheric air as oxidizer -- and will not be optimized for performance. A new combustion chamber design, larger than the LE-5, would be needed for an operational engine. There is some possibility that the schedule for the tests may slip, however, as the LE-7 engine meant for the H-2 launcher has hit problems (cracks in the hydrogen turbopump) and it has priority on facilities. Consolidation of shuttle spares and parts maintenance into a single centralized depot at the Cape is now nearly complete. Doing all parts testing and overhauling with a single set of facilities is cheaper than having each manufacturer maintain separate equipment and crews, and the central facility is credited with helping to solve the pump problem on the Magellan launch quickly. Parts availability has also risen greatly in the last couple of years, as NASA has finally been funding spares properly. [Readers may have noticed occasional items from Flight International in the past. I get both because there's a surprising amount of news that AW&ST doesn't cover, even in the US. Items from Flight have been scarce of late because they fouled up my subscription; that has now been cleared up, although I'm still wading through the backlog. Here are a few things from the 17 June issue:] Hercules/OSC sets Aug 22 as Pegasus launch date. [This has slipped since, due to problems with the carrier-aircraft pylon.] Hercules has now bought part of OSC. DARPA, which has bought the first launch, has also taken up two of its six options on further launches. The second launch, set for October, will carry a DARPA experimental comsat. The third is set for February, although DARPA has no specific payload plans yet and may pass the launch slot on to NASA or the USAF. Hercules is considering a "hot-drop test" with only the first stage live, to check out deployment and ignition. The first real launch will carry a 400lb payload into a 400mi polar orbit (nominal capacity is 600lbs to 215mi orbit); the payload is a DARPA UHF communications experiment with a NASA barium-release experiment piggybacked on it. Hercules/OSC is planning later versions of Pegasus: Pegasus 1A with a larger payload fairing, Pegasus 2 which will have a larger first stage (the current first stage becoming the second), and a less-well-defined Pegasus 3 with a larger fuselage diameter (77in vs 50in). Martin Marietta signs NASA's first commercial launch contract, to launch Mars Observer on a commercial Titan in 1992. Amroc's first commercial launch will carry a microgravity payload for an as-yet-unidentified customer; the payload will be recovered using an early version of Amroc's flyback reentry vehicle, which is meant to make a pinpoint landing from orbit using a remote-controlled ram-air parachute system. Space Services Inc. will launch its second Starfire commercial microgravity mission in November, and U of Alabama (which heads the Consortium for Materials Development in Space, the customer for this one and the previous one) has taken options on two more. Space Services hopes for DARPA business for small satellite launches, but says the market is very uncertain as yet. [You know, I'm a bit surprised that none of this showed up in AW&ST. Perhaps it's because it's outside the traditional Pentagon/contractor circle that AW&ST reports on in such detail...] -- V7 /bin/mail source: 554 lines.| Henry Spencer at U of Toronto Zoology 1989 X.400 specs: 2200+ pages. | uunet!attcan!utzoo!henry henry@zoo.toronto.edu ------------------------------ Date: 27 Aug 89 00:05:24 GMT From: agate!helios.ee.lbl.gov!ncis.tis.llnl.gov!blackbird!tkelso@ucbvax.Berkeley.EDU (TS Kelso) Subject: NASA Prediction Bulletins The most current orbital elements from the NASA Prediction Bulletins are carried on the Celestial RCP/M, (513) 427-0674, and are updated several times weekly. Documentation and tracking software are also available on this system. As a service to the satellite user community, the most current of these elements are uploaded weekly to sci.space. This week's elements are provided below. The Celestial RCP/M may be accessed 24 hours/day at 300, 1200, or 2400 baud using 8 data bits, 1 stop bit, no parity. - Current NASA Prediction Bulletins #561 - Alouette 1 1 00424U 89230.90328011 0.00000235 27322-3 0 2289 2 00424 80.4614 224.0399 0023204 333.6096 26.3893 13.67181647341389 SOLRAD R/B 1 00727U 64001 A 89226.33949863 .00000144 00000-0 14047-3 0 2833 2 00727 69.9000 331.0718 0013307 15.0258 345.1242 13.93561843301198 Cos 185 R/B 1 03019U 67104 B 89225.59897255 .00008578 00000-0 58334-3 0 4042 2 03019 64.0559 292.8167 0215272 221.5907 136.8751 14.89949919113632 ATS 3 1 03029U 67111 A 89221.47508567 -.00000074 00000-0 99999-4 0 2437 2 03029 12.8193 23.7568 0016241 196.2385 163.7721 1.00272335 79678 Cosmos 398 1 04966U 71 16 A 89226.72600566 .00022973 00000-0 15415-3 0 9384 2 04966 51.5504 257.3228 2499705 312.8335 28.7289 10.56539745558567 LAGEOS 1 08820U 89234.48903161 0.00000005 0 8729 2 08820 109.8383 252.7919 0044856 301.9549 57.6830 6.38664001 54861 GOES 2 1 10061U 89229.59772023 -.00000006 0 2935 2 10061 7.3130 67.3139 0005280 163.3646 196.8016 1.00265160 5992 GPS-0001 1 10684U 89230.78053078 0.00000010 10000-3 0 1973 2 10684 63.6246 98.8637 0108466 197.5374 162.1670 2.00559860 69788 GPS-0002 1 10893U 89228.24826889 -.00000027 0 277 2 10893 64.5029 339.8367 0154217 27.9055 332.9278 2.00554946 82555 GOES 3 1 10953U 89231.64480024 0.00000088 10000-3 0 7143 2 10953 6.1990 70.1261 0006227 264.5016 95.9883 1.00266217 1573 SeaSat 1 1 10967U 89230.97992021 0.00001150 44828-3 0 1531 2 10967 108.0209 56.9589 0001867 246.5563 113.5421 14.34784663583098 GPS-0003 1 11054U 89227.56235542 -.00000027 0 945 2 11054 64.1221 336.2350 0056120 119.0771 241.5097 2.00562260 79558 GPS-0004 1 11141U 89230.65264683 0.00000010 0 2048 2 11141 63.5940 98.7327 0055141 321.9247 37.7954 2.00569999 78310 NOAA 6 1 11416U 89233.03592660 0.00001177 50990-3 0 8865 2 11416 98.5114 228.2334 0010822 280.8266 79.1755 14.25932097527147 Solar Max 1 11703U 89233.07685008 0.00094476 10654-2 0 641 2 11703 28.4942 178.0446 0000548 42.9527 317.0817 15.61023891529963 GPS-0006 1 11783U 89231.60759301 -.00000027 0 9554 2 11783 63.8404 335.7691 0142425 62.4155 299.0504 2.00569519 68271 GOES 4 1 11964U 89198.09933455 -.00000043 0 654 2 11964 5.5538 73.1998 0033192 95.1158 265.1771 0.99228697 2321 GOES 5 1 12472U 89228.50069006 -.00000247 10000-3 0 7468 2 12472 2.7074 79.8744 0002776 127.0413 233.2339 1.00256416 29198 SME 1 12887U 81100 A 89225.54161164 .00016263 00000-0 54475-3 0 2708 2 12887 97.6838 253.5748 0003745 51.4268 308.7482 15.31015479433927 UOSAT 1 1 12888U 89233.06183778 0.00184720 12001-2 0 6918 2 12888 97.5441 291.5364 0002331 205.0847 155.0182 15.75427770439153 Meteor 2-08 1 13113U 89232.41385340 0.00000326 28391-3 0 6602 2 13113 82.5407 7.7066 0013981 242.3045 117.6693 13.84031665374122 Salyut 7 1 13138U 89233.72595252 0.00020138 43884-3 0 7124 2 13138 51.6094 355.9278 0000787 326.6168 33.5170 15.44236505418317 LandSat 4 1 13367U 82 72 A 89226.04122497 .00002082 00000-0 47206-3 0 552 2 13367 98.2094 288.8535 0003554 42.0267 318.1184 14.57124113376574 Meteor 2-09 1 13718U 89229.98122424 0.00000566 29209-3 0 8060 2 13718 81.2428 221.0887 0055890 181.4861 178.6158 14.13260341344283 IRAS 1 13777U 83 4 A 89225.54217577 .00000221 00000-0 17764-3 0 6668 2 13777 99.0415 61.8559 0013061 149.4242 210.7700 13.98619902 3936 TDRS 1 1 13969U 83 26 B 89222.52540050 -.00000201 00000-0 00000 0 0 8230 2 13969 3.7130 68.4423 0002168 55.1201 304.9326 1.00257476 89963 GOES 6 1 14050U 89225.71295718 0.00000120 0 66 2 14050 1.4431 83.3378 0000332 7.5271 352.6158 1.00259422 7188 OSCAR 10 1 14129U 89222.50747033 -.00000095 0 4212 2 14129 26.0561 250.4975 6050658 66.2981 344.4864 2.05883706 18330 GPS-0008 1 14189U 89226.21116740 0.00000009 10000-3 0 6531 2 14189 63.2200 97.5243 0136896 215.2337 143.9406 2.00566843 44609 Meteor 2-10 1 14452U 89227.49367175 0.00000774 32825-3 0 7590 2 14452 81.1607 234.1055 0093402 285.9697 73.1208 14.22280037300974 LandSat 5 1 14780U 89234.99777750 0.00001750 39811-3 0 8825 2 14780 98.1616 295.9470 0003654 53.6176 306.5325 14.57134068291291 UOSAT 2 1 14781U 89231.20667472 0.00002743 53312-3 0 4940 2 14781 97.9957 288.1684 0014006 118.0789 242.1880 14.63877666291765 LDEF 1 14898U 89231.36439028 0.00049133 69139-3 0 9404 2 14898 28.5032 90.2933 0001533 299.2804 60.7881 15.55249310301283 GPS-0009 1 15039U 89231.25709075 0.00000009 0 7171 2 15039 62.9392 96.6069 0014230 253.2171 106.7178 2.00564003 37985 Meteor 2-11 1 15099U 89227.31508179 0.00000352 30852-3 0 9615 2 15099 82.5339 319.3550 0014804 73.5477 286.7307 13.83691895258294 GPS-0010 1 15271U 89232.65337782 -.00000027 0 6963 2 15271 63.3286 335.4764 0100014 321.3281 37.9921 2.00568080 35125 Cosmos 1602 1 15331U 89232.63234523 0.00002866 41215-3 0 678 2 15331 82.5386 278.9566 0022400 232.7322 127.1844 14.75942922263721 NOAA 9 1 15427U 89230.91345901 0.00000790 45190-3 0 4164 2 15427 99.1484 219.1034 0015933 134.5064 225.7412 14.12124836241305 Meteor 2-12 1 15516U 89234.09684577 0.00000185 15575-3 0 1092 2 15516 82.5336 252.3309 0015470 295.2248 64.7310 13.84154475230176 Cosmos 1686 1 16095U 89233.59652931 0.00007330 16581-3 0 3457 2 16095 51.6075 356.5704 0002310 336.9500 23.2088 15.44227886219393 GPS-0011 1 16129U 89232.80910464 0.00000010 0 3482 2 16129 63.7568 97.3009 0119156 149.7964 210.9850 2.00563470 28335 Meteor 3-1 1 16191U 89233.92764751 0.00000043 10000-3 0 8511 2 16191 82.5482 189.2591 0020165 131.1807 229.1063 13.16872513184170 Meteor 2-13 1 16408U 89233.88972505 0.00000232 19829-3 0 5228 2 16408 82.5379 167.3669 0017398 112.7065 247.5931 13.84200954184643 Mir 1 16609U 89233.80762329 0.00041791 52751-3 0 12 2 16609 51.6201 34.8669 0010176 303.5542 56.5194 15.59084499201391 SPOT 1 1 16613U 89235.02407769 0.00000717 35513-3 0 5719 2 16613 98.7340 308.7179 0000985 42.0190 318.1037 14.20035481 21614 Meteor 2-14 1 16735U 89233.94688091 0.00000236 20303-3 0 3166 2 16735 82.5367 194.1671 0013654 181.5590 178.5527 13.83947015163558 Cosmos 1766 1 16881U 89235.06109027 0.00002754 39959-3 0 7067 2 16881 82.5262 336.1634 0021377 241.5431 118.3483 14.75578475165156 EGP 1 16908U 89230.37113023 -.00000049 -72657-4 0 1498 2 16908 50.0078 106.9145 0011202 145.2740 214.8827 12.44379509137154 FO-12 1 16909U 89226.01332023 -.00000025 10000-3 0 1674 2 16909 50.0170 120.5753 0011692 131.9903 228.1928 12.44401109136602 NOAA 10 1 16969U 89231.57272781 0.00000691 32293-3 0 2656 2 16969 98.6365 260.8565 0014678 68.4019 291.8727 14.23129702152955 Meteor 2-15 1 17290U 89234.10133641 0.00000250 21646-3 0 2838 2 17290 82.4672 100.9275 0014289 77.0607 283.2153 13.83754385132732 MOS-1 1 17527U 87 18 A 89226.06416390 .00000306 00000-0 25288-3 0 2150 2 17527 99.1445 297.0179 0000634 87.3624 272.7542 13.94853390126445 GOES 7 1 17561U 89230.36386135 -.00000105 0 3176 2 17561 0.0652 152.0046 0004113 19.5497 188.3216 1.00271825 2385 Kvant 1 17845U 89228.80749922 0.00014039 18456-3 0 8403 2 17845 51.6221 59.9847 0009578 282.2893 77.8609 15.58735573136881 DMSP B5D2-3 1 18123U 87 53 A 89221.23609348 .00000382 00000-0 22253-3 0 3584 2 18123 98.8252 51.0307 0013855 187.8231 172.2731 14.13490195110326 RS-10/11 1 18129U 89234.10324774 0.00000109 10861-3 0 8543 2 18129 82.9281 189.4639 0010589 224.5624 135.4685 13.71998060108433 Cosmos 1867 1 18187U 87 60 A 89226.05443111 -.00000036 00000-0 39432-5 0 9134 2 18187 65.0104 221.0153 0018882 254.8576 105.0387 14.29390916109391 Meteor 2-16 1 18312U 89233.86312605 0.00000219 18868-3 0 3068 2 18312 82.5584 167.5065 0013521 19.1405 341.0270 13.83502627101591 Meteor 2-17 1 18820U 89234.02661450 0.00000111 94367-4 0 1446 2 18820 82.5408 228.2245 0018528 83.8189 276.5079 13.84190750 78799 DMSP B5D2-4 1 18822U 88 6 A 89221.17211436 .00000376 00000-0 19220-3 0 2570 2 18822 98.6946 101.0309 0007582 89.0903 271.1142 14.20848478 78526 AO-13 1 19216U 89230.01820763 0.00007618 10391+2 0 458 2 19216 57.1147 194.8228 6777256 209.7048 83.3859 2.09741199 9030 OKEAN 1 1 19274U 88 56 A 89226.05254647 .00002767 00000-0 40601-3 0 4643 2 19274 82.5146 83.1219 0024174 46.3953 313.9263 14.75059713 59613 Meteor 3-2 1 19336U 89233.76260538 0.00000391 10000-2 0 2453 2 19336 82.5487 129.2873 0016661 345.7468 14.3171 13.16858006 51547 NOAA 11 1 19531U 89231.87767569 0.00000625 36753-3 0 1189 2 19531 98.9428 175.6049 0013339 54.8712 305.3710 14.11107528 46457 TDRS 3 1 19548U 88 91 B 89218.60225976 .00000127 00000-0 99999-4 0 314 2 19548 0.6939 84.0889 0003814 49.4904 226.4186 1.00273360 2293 GPS-0014 1 19802U 89 13 A 89220.85368862 .00000015 00000-0 99999-4 0 512 2 19802 55.1060 209.7420 0065501 157.9693 202.3225 2.00557432 3489 Meteor 2-18 1 19851U 89232.04044086 0.00000117 10000-3 0 661 2 19851 82.5277 108.3962 0014905 124.8404 235.4168 13.83831298 23918 TDRS 4 1 19883U 89 21 B 89213.25531629 -.00000234 00000-0 99999-4 0 254 2 19883 0.4855 72.6022 0002450 53.6115 234.3162 1.00282492 676 GPS-0013 1 20061U 89 44 A 89221.04335397 -.00000030 00000-0 00000 0 0 297 2 20061 54.6053 28.5142 0082360 164.4658 195.7994 2.00568754 1236 Raduga 1-1 1 20083U 89207.77927620 0.00000150 10000-3 0 393 2 20083 1.3949 273.2764 0005647 348.3379 12.0591 1.00270925 353 Nadezhda 1 20103U 89213.09000256 0.00000075 74156-4 0 181 2 20103 82.9623 160.9356 0036537 208.1477 151.7704 13.73491526 3774 1989 050B 1 20104U 89210.73341639 0.00000006 0 134 2 20104 82.9628 162.6306 0032576 192.5149 167.5202 13.74884939 3442 Gorizont 18 1 20107U 89227.47641353 -.00000251 10000-3 0 354 2 20107 1.4299 275.8161 0002957 37.1479 322.4929 1.00272176 413 1989 052D 1 20110U 89219.72792483 -.00000109 0 142 2 20110 1.5121 276.5079 0028004 75.6751 284.6099 1.03059945 348 Olympus 1 20122U 89222.16766756 -.00000119 10000-3 0 226 2 20122 0.0626 271.4242 0002569 41.9678 46.5866 1.00270106 60 1989 053B 1 20123U 89231.75432927 0.00069779 81203-2 0 422 2 20123 6.2864 91.1806 7277472 210.0943 73.7243 2.30533203 890 1988 063E 1 20127U 89226.19247825 0.00000638 21370-2 0 326 2 20127 7.9937 315.0859 7225608 112.5875 334.7491 2.26367775 7046 1988 098C 1 20132U 89226.71405655 0.00031314 78395-2 0 297 2 20132 3.7168 103.6435 7131770 84.6471 345.7197 2.47123793 6890 RESURS-F3 1 20134U 89219.92206973 0.00172715 12063-4 26742-3 0 474 2 20134 82.5683 86.6489 0012765 246.0471 114.0135 16.03977299 3292 Cosmos 2031 1 20136U 89229.79144166 0.00454077 11373-3 44353-3 0 662 2 20136 50.5516 318.6712 0033579 99.5307 261.0162 16.09527493 4877 Cosmos 2033 1 20147U 89233.79529115 0.00012700 21411-3 0 596 2 20147 65.0179 239.5442 0009088 272.5090 87.4384 15.51942730 4479 Cosmos 2034 1 20149U 89234.08847887 0.00000170 17412-3 0 303 2 20149 82.9365 67.7500 0030503 199.2844 160.7161 13.72423363 3812 1989 059B 1 20150U 89234.34343365 0.00000973 10185-2 0 429 2 20150 82.9373 67.4989 0028637 192.1947 167.8517 13.74254405 3849 TV-SAT 2 1 20168U 89231.14121786 -.00000008 10000-3 0 61 2 20168 0.1677 260.3348 0028583 353.6674 105.6678 1.00705069 52 Hipparcos 1 20169U 89230.77021668 0.00007258 12599-2 0 32 2 20169 6.9892 119.3216 7281024 186.1793 151.8145 2.29266378 242 1989 062C 1 20170U 89231.79642979 0.00002886 47183-2 0 131 2 20170 7.2175 119.2864 7253454 186.4131 152.3337 2.25946298 257 RESURS-F4 1 20175U 89234.84168687 0.00138220 74287-5 22676-3 0 221 2 20175 82.3056 139.1144 0004483 15.0514 344.2886 16.03147912 1199 GPS-0015 1 20185U 89232.58290002 0.00000015 10000-3 0 20 2 20185 54.9617 210.1490 0036624 243.5213 116.0295 2.02262032 4656 1989 064B 1 20186U 89233.14981940 0.01132144 -15977-4 12142-2 0 47 2 20186 30.9456 183.7699 0383787 50.2660 314.9165 15.39975226 440 1989 064C 1 20187U 89231.08980547 0.00017052 30813-5 11884-3 0 72 2 20187 37.6838 206.1253 6069004 198.0912 124.1630 4.05148649 41 1989 065A 1 20188U 89235.33794871 -.00090494 -17660-3 0 67 2 20188 62.8161 112.8173 0032086 97.7303 258.8701 15.98976111 139 1989 065B 1 20189U 89235.27504339 0.00963468 57554-3 10179-2 0 31 2 20189 62.8038 113.0924 0006248 239.8129 120.2485 16.10064364 129 -- Dr TS Kelso Asst Professor of Space Operations tkelso@blackbird.afit.af.mil Air Force Institute of Technology ------------------------------ End of SPACE Digest V10 #0 *******************