Using a Russian Navy
strategic submarine and a converted ballistic missile, a small research
satellite was launched into orbit Friday on a mission to aid in the potential
development of earthquake forecasts from space.
The Shtil 1 rocket blasted
out of its launch tube at 1850 GMT (2:50 p.m. EDT). The three-stage
liquid-fueled booster later released its payload as planned into the targeted
orbit with a high point of about 300 miles, a low point of approximately 250
miles, and an inclination of around 79 degrees.
The launch originated from
the Russian Navy's nuclear-powered Ekaterinburg submarine submerged in the
Barents Sea inside the Arctic Circle offshore Russia's northern coast.
Ground controllers detected
the first signals from the craft approximately seven hours later when it passed
over a Russian ground station. The Complex Orbital Magneto-Plasma Autonomous
Small Satellite 2 (COMPASS 2) was determined to be in good health, officials
said. Known as Kompass 2 in the Russian language, the 180-pound microsatellite
will soon begin its mission to study earthquakes and other natural disasters.
The mission is managed by
the Institute of Terrestrial Magnetism, Ionosphere, and Radio Waves
Propagation, or IZMIRAN, which is part of the Russian Academy of Sciences.
The satellite carries five
scientific instruments - totaling almost 45 pounds - to detect seismic activity
and to help determine the tell-tale signs of impending earthquakes and other
natural phenomena. Provided by scientists from Russia, Poland, Sweden, Hungary,
and Ukraine, the instruments will probe the Earth's underground lithosphere,
atmosphere, ionosphere, and magnetosphere to learn how each terrestrial region
is connected with a variety of events such as earthquakes, volcanoes, tropical
cyclones, and tornadoes.
Data from these studies
will contribute to the efforts of scientists to establish a model for the
cause-and-effect links associated with natural disasters found in all regions
of the Earth. Scientists also hope to find precursors of earthquakes that will
help in possible predictions of earthquakes based on information gathered from
satellites in space.
Links between the upper
atmosphere and seismic activity were first noticed in the 1960s, but hard
scientific data was not available until 1979. The Interkosmos 19 satellite
detected an unusual low-frequency noise in a large area centered near the
epicenter of an earthquake that occurred a few hours later. This finding was
later confirmed by other spacecraft.
IZMIRAN launched the first
COMPASS satellite in late 2001 with a specialized payload to further study
these connections. The experiment quickly
failed, however, when the instrument payload stopped working. A third
COMPASS satellite could launch before the end of 2006.
The launch was postponed
two days from Wednesday to undisclosed reasons. The flight was the 19th space
launch to successfully reach orbit in 2006, and the sixth launch from Russia
this year.