Britain's Skylark Rocket Engine Flies Final Mission

Britain's Skylark Rocket Engine Flies Final Mission
After 48 years in service, the British Skylark rocket motor begins its final mission on Monday May 2, 2005 launching the 12.8-meter (42.2-foot) sounding rocket Maser 10 into space from Swedish Space Corporation SSC's launching facility Esrange in Kiruna nothern Sweden. The first launch of a Skylark was made in 1957 and it has been used 96 times for launching sounding rockets from the pad at Esrange and 440 times in total. Maser 10 is part of the Maser sounding rocket program for research in microgravity _ the state of near-weightlessness experienced inside a falling object. (AP Photo/Paul Whitfield)

STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) -- The British Skylark rocket engine saw its final launch Monday in northernmost Sweden after rocketing into space more than 400 times over five decades.

The last Skylark blasted off at 7 a.m. when the unmanned sounding rocket Maser 10 was launched into space from the Esrange pad, said Johanna Bergstrom-Roos, a spokeswoman for the Swedish Space Corporation.

The launch was originally scheduled for Sunday, but was delayed because of bad weather.

"Everything went well," with the launch and the flight, Bergstrom-Roos said, adding that the landing of the payload was rougher than expected because of a parachute that failed to open properly.

The Skylark engine, which is no longer in production, will be replaced by a Brazilian engine this fall. Skylark engines have been used 96 times for launching sounding rockets from the pad at Esrange and 440 times in total.

Maser 10 is part of the Maser sounding rocket program for research in microgravity -- a state of near-weightlessness -- managed by the SSC.

The payload consisted of two biological experiments and three experiments in fluid physics.

The 42.2-foot rocket flew for about 16 minutes, and reached a height of about 158 miles. The microgravity period lasted six minutes, Bergstrom-Roos said.

Despite the rough landing, "it looks like all the (biological) test samples are intact," she said.

The microgravity environment gives researchers a unique opportunity to study the fundamental states of matter -- solids, liquids and gases -- and the forces that affect them.

In microgravity, researchers can isolate and control the forces, giving them access to test results that haven't been influenced by the earth's gravity.

The Esrange launching pad is located near Kiruna, some 765 miles north of the capital, Stockholm.

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