Foton

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Kozlov Foton 6 on display at the Evergreen Aviation Museum in McMinnville, Oregon
Kozlov Foton 6 on display at the Evergreen Aviation Museum in McMinnville, Oregon

Foton (or Photon) is the project name of two series of Russian science satellite programs. Although unmanned, the design was adapted from the manned Vostok spacecraft capsule. The primary focus of the Foton project is materials science research, but some missions have also carried experiments for other fields of research including biology. The original Foton series included 12 launches from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome from 1985 to 1999. The second series, under the name Foton-M, incorporates many design improvements over the original Foton, and is still in use. So far, there have been three launch attempts of the Foton-M. The first was in 2002 from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome, which ended failure due to a problem in the launch vehicle. The last two were from the Baikonur Cosmodrome, one in 2005 and one in 2007, both were successful. Both the Foton and Foton-M series used Soyuz-U (11A511U and 11A511U2) rockets as launch vehicles.

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[edit] ESA participation

Starting with the Foton-7 mission, the European Space Agency has been a partner in the Foton program.[1]

[edit] Foton launches

Designation Launch Date Recovery Date Mission Payload(s) Notes
Foton-1 1985-04-16  ?
Foton-2 1986-05-21  ?
Foton-3 1987-04-24  ?
Foton-4 1988-04-14  ?
Foton-5 1989-04-26  ?
Foton-6 1990-04-11  ? On display at the Evergreen Aviation Museum
Foton-7 1991-10-04  ?
Foton-8 1992-10-08  ?
Foton-9 1994-06-14  ?
Foton-10 1995-02-16  ?
Foton-11 1997-10-09  ?
Foton-12 1999-09-09  ?
Foton-M1 2002-10-15 N/A Lost due to a launch failure
Foton-M2 2005-05-31 2005-06-16
Foton-M3 2007-09-14 2007-09-26 Young Engineers' Satellite 2

[edit] References

  1. ^ Foton. ESA.

[edit] External links