Russia’s Angara-A5 Rocket Launched Successfully on Third Try

by news
April 11, 2024

After two earlier this week failed to launch in the last seconds of the countdown, a Russian rocket launched on Thursday for a test flight.

A live broadcast demonstrated the launch of the flagship Angara A5, a formidable spacecraft built to carry large payloads into low Earth orbit, from the Vostochny Cosmodrome in the Russian Far East.

“The rocket worked according to plan. The upper stage separated … and is currently putting the test payload into target orbit,” the Roscosmos space agency said in a social media post shortly after the launch.

Launch attempts on Tuesday and Wednesday were cancelled due to a failure in a pressurising system in an oxidiser tank and in the engine control system, according to Roscosmos.

A Roscosmos broadcast showed the craft had reached an altitude of 268 kilometres (167 miles) in the 13 minutes after take-off.

In recent years, Russia’s space program has experienced several well-publicized setbacks.

Russia once again abruptly postponed last month’s Soyuz spacecraft launch to the International Space Station (ISS).

On that occasion, three astronauts — from Russia, Belarus and the United States — were strapped in and ready for take-off when a “voltage dip” triggered an automatic shutdown seconds before blast-off.

The launch went ahead two days later.

And last year Russia’s first mission to the moon in almost 50 years failed when a lander crashed into the lunar surface.

There have also been delays in Russia’s development of the Angara A-5 heavy booster rocket, which is intended to carry tons of equipment into space.

In the last ten years, there have only been three test launches, one of which resulted in a partial failure.

Moscow intends to transport modules for an ISS competitor that it intends to build in the upcoming years using its cargo capabilities.

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