Space Shuttle Prototype Glides Safely to Earth
Posted on: Sunday, 9 May 2004, 06:00 CDT
Space shuttle prototype glides safely to Earth
From Journal Sentinel wire reports
Sunday, May 9, 2004
Stockholm, Sweden -- An unmanned prototype of a European space shuttle glided safely back to Earth on Saturday after being dropped from nearly 8,000 feet up by a helicopter in a successful test.
Guided by Global Positioning System satellites, the German- designed EADS Phoenix was dropped by a heavy-duty helicopter over Sweden at 9:45 a.m. and "landed perfectly" 90 seconds later on a test runway north of Stockholm, a project spokeswoman said.
"Everyone here is ecstatic," said Johanna Bergstroem-Roos, of the North European Aerospace Test Range in Kiruna, 770 miles north of Stockholm. "This gives us wind in our sails."
The Phoenix shuttle, along with the Ariane 5 rocket, represents the European Space Agency's hope for sending astronauts into space, but project managers concede that a full-size version will not be ready until sometime between 2015 and 2020.
The test flight was originally planned for Friday but was postponed so technicians could finish analyzing data from an earlier test of the vehicle's onboard computers last week.
Related Articles
- United Space Alliance Successfully Tests Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Booster Steering System
- Field Testing Space Droids in the Desert
- NASA Successfully Tests Space Shuttle Main Engine
- NASA and ZERO-G Test Space Shuttle Runway Program
- Unmanned European Shuttle Lands Safely
- European Shuttle Prototype Lands Safely
- European Shuttle Logs Successful Test
- European Shuttle Logs Successful Flight Test
- Test Glide of European Shuttle Delayed
- NASA's Tests May Add Look inside Shuttle Wings
User Comments (0)

RSS Feeds