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Irtysh (Russian: Иртыш), [2] also named Soyuz-5 (Russian: Союз-5), formerly codenamed Fenix in Russian and Sunkar (Kazakh: Сұңқар, lit. 'falcon') in Kazakh, is a planned Russian rocket that is being developed by JSC SRC Progress within the "Project Feniks" (Russian: Феникс, lit.
Leonov served as a consultant for the design process, which was completed during 1966. Suit fabrication and testing occurred in 1967, but the Soyuz 1 accident in April of that year and Soyuz docking difficulties on the Soyuz 2 and Soyuz 3 missions delayed their use in space until the Soyuz 4 and Soyuz 5 flights. To prevent the suit from ...
Irtysh / DM-SLB: Baikonur Site 45/1: Roscosmos: Dummy satellite Roscosmos: Low Earth: Flight test First launch of Irtysh, also known as Soyuz-5. A dummy payload matching a future satellite in weight and size will be launched. Q4 (TBD) [37] Soyuz-2.1b / Fregat-M: Plesetsk Site 43: Roscosmos: Ekspress-RV1: RSCC: Highly elliptical: Communications
1: Soyuz-T Soviet Union: OKB-1 ... Irtysh (rocket) Angara A5: 6: 6.1: 37,478 Solar panels (Planned: 2028) Planned: 0: Dream Chaser
Soyuz-FG erected at the Baikonur Cosmodrome launch pad 1/5 (nicknamed Gagarin's Start) ahead of Soyuz TMA-13 in October 2008. In the early 1990s plans were made for a redesigned Soyuz with a Fregat upper stage. The Fregat engine was developed by NPO Lavochkin from the propulsion module of its Phobos interplanetary probes.
After Rus-M was ultimately canceled in 2011 after falling victim to the Great Recession, and competition with Angara, TsSKB Progress disclosed the existence of the Soyuz-5 rocket concept in 2013. [8] Soyuz-5, later renamed "Irtysh", became the successor to Rus-M after Rus-M's cancelation and Irtysh surviving Roscosmos budget cuts in 2015. [8]
Because Season 5 of Yellowstone was split into two parts, Season 5, Part 1 is currently streaming on Peacock. But Season 5 Part 2 (also called Season 5B) does not have an official streaming date yet.
However, this project, part of Soyuz-5, was abandoned when Soyuz-5 evolved into a replacement for Zenit family named Irtysh, [when?] with RKK Energia as manufacturer. The methalox rocket was later renamed to Soyuz-7.