Brazil Getting Ready to Go to Space in 2006

In an interview with Russian news agency RIA Novosti, the President of the Brazilian Space Agency (Agência Espacial Brasileira, AEB), Sérgio Gaudenzi, informed that Brazil hopes to have its first astronaut/cosmonaut in space next year aboard a Russian Soyuz space craft in one of Soyuz’s trip to the International Space Station (ISS).

Russia’s Space Agency (RKA) has invited the Brazilian Minister of Science and Technology, Eduardo Campos and Gaudenzi to visit Russia next month, so both countries can discuss details of a possible joint space mission.


According to Novosti, Russia and Brazil agreed in principle that Russia would help in a first Brazilian astronaut’s flight to the ISS. These preliminary talks occurred during a recent visit to Brazil of a Russian Space Agency delegation led by Agency deputy chief Viktor Remishevsky.


Cost might be a factor in the venture. While a commercial flight on a Soyuz rocket costs US$ 20 million in average, Brazil expects this fee will be considerably reduced for its astronaut, Air Force Lieutenant Coronel, Marcos C. Pontes, who has trained with NASA’s astronauts in the United States.


“Brazilian Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Marcos C. Pontes has undergone relevant training at NASA and is prepared to take a course in Russia’s Stellar City (Moscow region),” said Gaudenzi.


“Colonel Pontes is ready to take a course in Russia’s Stellar City,” said Gaudenzi. “To take a Soyuz flight he has to learn to speak Russian, and Pontes is very enthusiastic about it. He said he would work hard while taking a course of training for Russian cosmonauts and promised to start speaking Russian in six months,”


In its interview to Novosti, Gaudenzi also talked about how grateful Brazil is for the help Russian scientists are willing to give Brazil to develop a new booster for the Brazilian space program and equip the rocket with a liquid propulsion engine.


For Gaudenzi, cooperation with Russia is of strategic importance for Brazil’s space industry.


“Modernizing the VLS booster with the help of Russian technology will allow to update the engine and raise the payload to 800 kg at the second stage.The third stage envisages the installation of a compound engine, and the payload will be raised to 1.5 tons. This will allow to place satellites to the geostationary earth orbit,” said the AEB chief to the Russian news agency.

Tags:

You May Also Like

Brazil’s Suzano Joins Club of Eco Friendly Companies

Suzano Bahia Sul Papel e Celulose S.A., one of Latin America’s largest integrated producers ...

Lula on Ahmadinejad: Condemning Our Talks Is as Intolerant as Not Wanting Peace

Talking to the Brazilian people this Monday morning in his weekly radio program, Breakfast ...

Brazil Betting World’s Beef Ban Will Be Lifted By Year’s End

Brazil is hopeful the ban on Brazilian beef imposed by almost 50 countries following ...

Brazil Gets Own Branch of Altair Engineering

Michigan, US-based Altair Engineering, Inc., a global maker of advanced engineering software and grid ...

Brazil’s Lula and Argentina’s Kirchner Talk About Nukes, Space and War

"It is a legitimate concern." That is the way ambassador José Eduardo Martins FelÀ­cio, ...

Brazil’s Petrobras Signs Biodiesel Contracts. 65,000 Families to Be Benefited

Brazilian oil company Petrobras signed today with four private companies their first contracts for ...

Brazil Entrepreneurs Ask For Less Red Tape and Flexible Labor Laws

Brazilian entrepreneurs participating in a meeting, last week, with the presidential candidates, organized by ...

Brazil’s Petrobras Strikes Light Oil in Rio’s Coast

Petrobras, the Brazilian oil giant, announced at the end of last week, the discovery ...

Employment Rate Up But Hours Worked Down in Brazil

Brazil’s National Confederation of Industry (CNI) released, yesterday, its industrial indicators for July. The most ...

Brazil’s Petrobras Exchange Technology with Mexico’s Pemex

The president of Brazilian state-controlled oil company Petrobras, Sérgio Gabrielli, is in Mexico to ...