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Yubileiny

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Yubileiny
Mission typeTechnology/Amateur radio
OperatorNPO PM
COSPAR ID2008-025AEdit this at Wikidata
SATCATno.32953
Mission duration1 year
Start of mission
Launch date23 May 2008(2008-05-23)
RocketRokot/Briz-KM
Launch sitePlesetsk133/3
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric
RegimeLow Earth
Transponders
Frequency435.215 and 435.315 MHz

Yubileiny(Russian:Юбиле́йный,lit.Jubilee) is an educational Russian satellite built byNPO PM[1]to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the launch ofSputnik 1,the firstartificial satelliteto be placed into Earth orbit. The satellite was launched on 23 May 2008 aboard aRokotclass rocket from the LC-133 launch facility at thePlesetsk Cosmodrome,after being delayed since the end of 2007. It was a secondary payload accompanying a cluster of threeGonetscommunication satellites, and utilised the excess capacity of the carrier.[2]

The satellite mission was to broadcast audio and video about theSovietandRussian space programmes,as well as to imitate the beeping call signals ofSputnik 1.[3]These signals are intended for being receipted byamateur radioenthusiasts.

Reactionless drive scandal

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In April 2009 Russian news media reported that a 'reactionless drive' had been tested on the spacecraft. "Specialists of the Institute for Space Systems conducted successful tests of the perpetual motion machine in space," wrotePravdain Moscow. The mentioned Institute for Space Systems was a satellite project contractor and its director Valery Menshikov also headed the funding agency supported the launch. According to media, Valery Menshikov announced that a reactionless "machine was installed in the Yubileiny satellite, which was launched into orbit almost a year ago. The satellite can now move from one orbit to another with the help of the engine, which discharges no reaction mass". Menshikov continued, in a claim not verified by any Western space source: "The first tests were conducted in June and July of 2008. The tests revealed some problems that need further developments of the machine, but the orbital experiment was conducted successfully in general."[4][5]The engine was designed and made byFominskiy Leonid Pavlovich.[citation needed]

These pseudo-scientific statements by a highly ranked industry manager resulted in a scandal in Russia. Some scientists warned that the installed 'reactionless engine' is based on a tricky non-linear friction in bearings and cannot work in zero gravity.[6]In 2011, the discussion was summed up by notable scientist and member of theRussian Academy of Sciences,Eduard Kruglyakov,who wrote that the installed engine had not changed the satellite's orbit by even a micron.[6] TheRoscosmosofficials commented that the 'reactionless drive' part was installed initially to keep the mass balance and could not be removed after its actual role had been revealed.[6]

References

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  1. ^Ria Novosti - Спутник малого класса "Юбилейный" доставлен на космодром "Плесецк"Archived2008-01-27 at theWayback Machine
  2. ^"Russia launches relay craft, commemorative satellite".Spaceflight Now.
  3. ^NPO PM - Preparation for “Yubileiny” satellite launching[dead link]
  4. ^Russian scientists test perpetual motion machine in spacePravda.ru 2009-04-14.
  5. ^Russian Scientists Test New Type of Engine for Nano SatellitesPravda.ru 2010-02-18.
  6. ^abcKruglyakov, Eduard P. (2011)"Совместимы ли мракобесие и инновации?" ('Are Obscurantism and Innovations Compatible?')Bulletin 'In Defence of Science' no.9, pp.2-3. (pdf, 253 Kb(in Russian))