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New generation spacecraft

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Manned spaceship "RUS"
Start development: 06.04.2009
Finalization of the draft design: 2010 year
Booster: "Rus-M"
Crew: 6 people
Mass of the cargo delivered to orbit - 100 kg
Mass of the cargo returned to Earth - 500 kg
Mass unearned - 4,5 tons (including systems for soft landing - 8 tons).
Length autonomous flight of the ship - 1 month
Tests of the spacecraft in an unmanned version is scheduled to begin in 2015, and in manned - in 2018

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The Rus-M family of rockets, employing the RD-180 engine on the first stage and the RD-0146 engine on the second stage as of April 2009. Variant 1 would use three inseparable boosters on the first stage. Variant 2 would use five boosters, with four strap-on boosters separating earlier in flight, while the central core booster would burn longer by thrusting less than its full capability during the initial phase of the flight and throttling up to the full thrust upon the separation of four strap-on boosters. Variant 3 would employ stretched first stage for a larger propellant load. The fourth variation of the vehicle with a single first stage booster and an upper stage borrowed from the Soyuz 2 rocket would also be possible (not shown). It could deliver six tons to the low-Earth orbit. All four variations would use the same launch facility in Vostochny.
 
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RKK Energia, Russia's chief manufacturer of the manned spacecraft, reiterated on January 26, 2010, that the first unmanned launch of the new-generation spacecraft intended to replace Soyuz would take place in 2015.

Speaking at the 34th Korolev Readings in prestigious Bauman Technical University in Moscow, the head of the company Vitaly Lopota said that the new vehicle would likely make its maiden voyage into space from the yet-to-be-built Vostochny Cosmodrome in the Amur region of Russia, however if the facility would not be ready, the mission would originate from Baikonur, Kazakhstan.

Lopota did not elaborate, when RKK Energia would have to make a commitment to one launch facility or another and which launch vehicle would be used for possible missions from Baikonur. The Rus-M rocket, whose development officially started in 2009, was specifically designed to support the new manned space program and it was to be based exclusively in Vostochny, but not in Baikonur.

Therefore, even for temporary missions from the Kazakh launch site, yet another newly developed vehicle or an existing rocket would have to be adapted to carry the new-generation spacecraft, known as PTK NP, into orbit. The Ukrainian-built Zenit launcher or a similar Russian-built vehicle would be a likely candidate, as it has the payload capacity of up to 13 tons, needed to lift the future spacecraft and the Zenit has an operational launch pad in Baikonur.

The Soyuz rockets, which currently launch seven-ton Russian manned spacecraft from Baikonur, are not powerful enough to carry future ships. Although the 2015 launch date for the PTK NP, was announced back in 2007, Lopota's statement was the first to disclose the possibility of using Baikonur, as a launch site for the new-generation spacecraft. Previously, Russian prime-minister Vladimir Putin, admitted that the construction of a brand-new launch facility in Vostochny in Russia's remote far-eastern region was more difficult than originally expected.

Unofficial reports also said that the completion of the launch center by 2015 was impossible due to lack of funds. The Russian government has planned the development of a launch site for the manned space program on the Russian territory ever since the disintegration of the Soviet Union left Baikonur in the newly independent republic of Kazakhstan.

Previously, Russian industry sources cited the possibility of adapting the veteran Soyuz spacecraft for possible lunar missions, in case current efforts to develop PTK NP stall. A three-seat Soyuz first flew in 1966 and was originally intended to beat US Apollo missions to the Moon. In the past several years, Russian space officials have promised to prepare for possible manned lunar missions within a timeframe of the NASA effort to return to the Moon around 2020.

Building a nuclear-powered spacecraft

In addition to ambitious plans to develop the new-generation spacecraft, Lopota added his voice in support of an aggressive Solar System exploration program in Russia with the use of nuclear-powered spacecraft. Echoing a number of Russian space officials before him, the head of RKK Energia promised the development of a powerful space-based nuclear power source in the next 10-15 years.

According to Lopota, the nuclear energy would provide electricity to large communications platforms, Earth-watching radar and optical satellites and even early-warning network of spacecraft designed to protect the Earth from dangerous asteroids. However, the ultimate goal of the nuclear power sources in space would be to support the most ambitious goals of deep-space exploration, such as missions to the Moon and planets of the Solar System. Lopota cited a possible use of nuclear energy to power a permanent human base on the Moon.

Last November, Russian president Dmitry Medvedev in a televised address to the Federal Council, endorsed the development of a space-based nuclear power system as a high-priority national goal.
 
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The comparison of two possible versions of the PPTS spacecraft and the Soyuz capsule.

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Artist rendering of the Rus-M launch with the PTK NP spacecraft, as it was envisioned by developers during 2009.

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An Earth-orbiting configuration of the PTK NP (PPTS) spacecraft as of summer 2008.

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Artist rendering of a next-generation manned spacecraft, equipped with a booster stage to escape the Earth’s gravity and to reach lunar orbit.

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The 16.5-ton lunar version of the PPTS spacecraft could feature a "stretched" service module, which could carry increased load of propellant for maneuvers in the vicinity of the Moon.
 
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RKK Energia demonstrated the first scale model of the PTK NP (PPTS) spacecraft at Moscow Air and Space Show in August 2009. The model revealed the use of reusable thermal protective tiles on the spacecraft, instead of traditional ablative system, which would burn away in layers during the reentry into the Earth atmosphere.

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A docking ring is possibly the first element of the PTK NP spacecraft appearing in metal and the first "point of contact" in the International cooperation on the next-generation spacecraft.
 
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nice. I see Russians too have been busy going full throttle towards the space.
 
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Scheme of planting. Reusable part is only a detachable landing module.

 
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nice picturees and information,i see the russians r again back in space:cheers:
 
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