Progress-M

(Redirected from Progress M)

Progress-M (Russian: Прогресс-М, GRAU indices 11F615A55 and 11F615A60), also known as Progress 7K-TGM, is a Russian, previously Soviet spacecraft which is used to resupply space stations. It is a variant of the Progress spacecraft, originally built in the late 1980s as a modernised version of the Progress 7K-TG spacecraft, using new systems developed for the Soyuz-T and Soyuz-TM spacecraft. The 11F61560 variant incorporated further modernisation, with digital flight control systems replacing the earlier analogue ones. The older 11F615A55 spacecraft outlived the newer 11F615A60. The final Progress-M, Progress-M-UM, was launched on 24 November 2021.

Progress-M
A Progress M spacecraft
ManufacturerRKK Energia
Country of originUSSR
Russia
OperatorRoskosmos
ApplicationsSpace station logistics
Specifications
RegimeLow Earth
Design life180 days
Production
StatusRetired
Built11F615A55: 67
11F615A60: 29
Launched11F615A55: 67
11F615A60: 30
Retired11F615A55: 67
11F615A60: 28
Failed11F615A60: 1
Lost11F615A60: 1
Maiden launch11F615A55: Progress M-1 (1989)
11F615A60: Progress M-01M (2008)
Last launch11F615A55: Progress M-UM (2021)
11F615A60: Progress M-29M
Last retirement11F615A55: Progress M-UM (2021)
11F615A60: Progress M-29M
Related spacecraft
Derived fromProgress 7K-TG
Soyuz-TM
DerivativesProgress-M1
Progress MS
Progress M-47, seen from the ISS

The first forty three Progress-M spacecraft were used to resupply Mir, with subsequent spacecraft flying to the International Space Station. As of July 2013, eighty seven spacecraft have been launched, with sixty seven using the older model, and twenty using the newer version. Launches of the 11F615A60 are continuing. One 11F615A60, Progress M-12M, was lost in a launch failure in August 2011. Progress M-27M was launched on 28 April 2015 but communication with the vessel was lost soon after. With vehicle control lost, it is expected to destructively re-enter due to orbital decay.[1]

Two Progress M spacecraft, M-14 and M-38, were modified to carry VDU attitude control systems to the Mir space station.

The Progress M1 is a derivative of the Progress M, optimized to carry more fuel, at the expense of dry cargo and water. It entered service in 2000, and was retired in 2004. A modernised version, incorporating the upgrades made to the Progress M 11F615A60 was scheduled to enter service in 2011, however this was cancelled before it made its first flight.

The upgraded Progress MS spacecraft flew for the first time in December 2015.

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Unmanned Russian spacecraft "plunging to Earth"". Yahoo News. 29 April 2015. Retrieved 29 April 2015.
edit