Updated November 20, 2009
Cosmonaut Says Russia Falling Behind in Space Race
Associated Press
Russia lacks a viable program for developing a new spacecraft and risks losing its place as a leader in space travel, a veteran Russian cosmonaut said
MOSCOW — Russia lacks a viable program for developing a new spacecraft and risks losing its place as a leader in space travel, a veteran Russian cosmonaut said in an interview published Friday.
Efforts to build a successor to the 40-year old Soyuz spacecraft have dragged on with no end in sight, Mikhail Tyurin told the Novaya Gazeta newspaper.
Tyurin, a veteran of two missions to the International Space Station in 2001 and 2007, blamed the slow progress on a lack of clear goals and poor coordination.
"They have issued an order for a new spacecraft without having any concept," Tyurin said.
He said officials' talk of using the ship to fly to the International Space Station, and then the moon and Mars, are unfeasible. "One vehicle can't be both a steamroller and a Formula One racer," he said.
Russia's Federal Space Agency had no immediate comment.
Last month, its chief, Anatoly Perminov, proposed building a new nuclear-powered spaceship for prospective manned missions to Mars and other planets. He offered few specifics, and the proposal sounded more like a plea for funds than a specific project.
Tyurin said that work on the prospective ship has proceeded slowly, with engineers continuing to argue over such basic things as whether the new spacecraft should come back using parachutes, like the Soyuz, or land like a plane, similar to the U.S. shuttles.
Russia has used the Soyuz and Progress spacecraft, whose design dates back to the 1960s, to send crews and cargo to the International Space Station. It stands to take an even greater role in space exploration in the coming years.
NASA's plan to retire its shuttle fleet next year will force the United States and other nations to rely exclusively on the Russian spacecraft to ferry their astronauts to the station and back to Earth until NASA's new manned ship becomes available.
But Tyurin warned that the failure to develop new space technologies would relegate Russia to a secondary role in the near future.
"Very soon, no one will need the Russian space program," he said. "Our partners already have got all they could from us. They won't take us into the future."
Latest SciTech Videos
Most Active
Most Read
Most Commented
-
Inconvenient Truth for Gore as Arctic Ice Claims Don't Add Up
December 15, 2009 511 comments
-
Obama to End NASA Constellation Program
January 29, 2010 401 comments
-
30 Years of Global Cooling Are Coming, Leading Scientist Says
January 11, 2010 356 comments
-
White House Confirms Course Change for NASA
February 01, 2010 247 comments
-
What's Islam? Don't Ask Google
January 08, 2010 237 comments
-
WebOS 1.4 hitting Sprint's Pre and Pixi on February 15th?
February 10, 2010
-
Solar flares set to wreak havoc on GPS signals
February 10, 2010
-
Pentax teases new DSLR, 645 Digital finally making its debut?
February 10, 2010
-
Opera Mini for iPhone to be revealed next week, available never
February 10, 2010
-
Earliest Known Galaxies Spied in Deep Hubble Picture
January 04, 2010
-
Yearlong Star Eclipse May Help Solve Space Mystery
January 04, 2010
-
Stuck Mars Rover About to Die?
January 04, 2010
-
Five New Planets Found; Hotter Than Molten Lava
January 03, 2010
-
Isaac Newton: Who He Was, Why Google Apples Are Falling
January 03, 2010
-
Bing Is Not Google, but It Might Be Yahoo in a Year or Two
February 10, 2010
-
BoomTown Heads to TED (and Promises No Pretentious Tweets!)
February 10, 2010
-
Mobile Data Traffic: 3.6 Billion Gigabytes a Month by 2014
February 09, 2010
-
Viacom, Real Networks Spin Off Rhapsody Music Service
February 09, 2010
-
3rd UPDATE: Baidu Profit Up 48%; Expects Strong 1Q Revenue
February 10, 2010
-
Brazil Vivo To Pay $452 Million In Dividends
February 10, 2010
-
Russian Railways Could Buy 20 Alstom High-Speed Trains -Agency
February 10, 2010
-
Taiwan Eases Restrictions On Tech Firms Investing In China
February 10, 2010
-
Taiwan To Ease Rules On Chip, LCD Investments In China - Official
February 10, 2010



recommend

Subscribe to Comments







