T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
546.1 | | STAR::HUGHES | | Fri Jul 07 1989 14:59 | 45 |
| The following is from the July 89 issue of Spaceflight News (a British
monthly) with some minor alterations by me. Numbers in parentheses are
flight numbers. The flight number for COBE is a guess on my part.
Date Vehicle Site Payload
---- ------- ---- -------
6/89 Tsyklon PLE Aktivny-1K
6/89 Titan IV/IUS CAFB DSP
6/89 Delta II (186) CAFB GPS
6/89 Ariane 3 (V32) KOU Olympus (delayed until Jul 11)
7/89 Ariane 4 (V33) KOU Hipparcos, TV-Sat 2
7/89 Delta II (187) KSC Insat-1D (delayed 12 months?)
7/89? Tsyklon PLE Meteor-2/3
7/89 STS Columbia KSC DoD mission
7/89 Delta 5920 (185)VAFB COBE
8/89 Delta II (188) CAFB BSB
8/89 H-1 TAN GMS-4
8/89 Pegasus VAFB GLOMR, Pegasus test
8/89 Soyuz BAI Soyuz TM-8
8/89 Proton BAI GLONASS
Abbreviations:
PLE Plesetsk, USSR
CAFB Canaveral AFB, USA (nit picking, I know...)
KSC Kennedy Space Center, USA
KOU Kourou, French Guiana
VAFB Vandenburg AFB, USA
TAN Tanegashima Space Center, Japan
BAI Baikonur, USSR
DSP Defense Support Program (missile launch detection)
GPS Global Position System (Navstar)
COBE Cosmic ray Background Explorer
BSB British Satellite Broadcasting (UK direct broadcast TV sat)
GMS Geosynchronous Met Sat
GLONASS Soviet GPS system
COBE is to be launched on a Delta configuration that is a hybrid of the
older Delta 3920 and the Delta 6920 (the first of the Delta II family).
I think the model number is 5920. Another one flight configuration of
Delta.
Mar Observer will fly on a Titan III/TOS (Transfer Orbit Stage).
gary
|
546.2 | the score so far | STAR::HUGHES | | Mon Jul 17 1989 16:15 | 132 |
| And here is a log of launches so far this year, from Usenet.
From: [email protected] (Jonathan McDowell)
Here are all the orbital launches for the
first half of the year... I'm afraid the
file is rather wide.
Jonathan
-------------------------------------------
Space Launches 1st/2nd Qtr 1989
-------------------------------------------
NORAD No. Date Satellite Agency Launched by From Status at 1 Jul 89
19749 01A Jan 10 Kosmos-1987 GK GK Proton (4) KB 64.9 deg,19110x19149 km
19750 01B Jan 10 Kosmos-1988 GK " 64.9 deg,19110x19149 km
19751 01C Jan 10 Kosmos-1989(Etalon) GK " 64.9 deg,19101x19149 km
19756 02A Jan 12 Kosmos-1990 TsP GUGK GK Soyuz KPL Landed KRZ Feb 11
19758 03A Jan 18 Kosmos-1991 GRU GK Soyuz KB Landed KRZ Feb 1
19765 04A Jan 26 Gorizont MSvyazi GK Proton (4) KB GEO at 53 deg E
19769 05A Jan 26 Kosmos-1992 KGB? GK Kosmos II KPL 778x784 km, 74 deg
19772 06A Jan 27 Intelsat VA F15 INTELSAT AE Ariane 2/V28 CSG GEO at 60 deg E
19774 07A Jan 28 Kosmos-1993 GRU GK Soyuz KB Landed KRZ?, Mar 27
19783 08A Feb 10 Progress-40 GK GK Soyuz KB Deorbited over POR Mar 7
19785 09A Feb 10 Kosmos-1994 VMF? GK Tsiklon KPL 82.6 deg 1395x1417 km
19786 09B Feb 10 Kosmos-1995 VMF? " 82.6 deg 1413x1417 km
19787 09C Feb 10 Kosmos-1996 VMF? " 82.6 deg 1406x1417 km
19788 09D Feb 10 Kosmos-1997 VMF? " 82.6 deg 1400x1417 km
19789 09E Feb 10 Kosmos-1998 VMF? " 82.6 deg 1390x1417 km
19790 09F Feb 10 Kosmos-1999 VMF? " 82.6 deg 1384x1417 km
19792 10A Feb 10 Kosmos-2000 TsP GUGK GK Soyuz KPL Landed KRZ Mar 2
19796 11A Feb 14 Kosmos-2001 PVO GK Molniya KPL 62.8 deg 855x39511 km
19800 12A Feb 14 Kosmos-2002 ? GK Kosmos KPL 65.8 deg 181x1538 km
19802 13A Feb 14 Navstar GPS 14 USAF USAF Delta 6925/184 CCAFS 55.1 deg 20004x20361 km
19807 14A Feb 15 Molniya-1 MSvyazi GK Molniya KB 63.0 deg 566x39783 km
19818 15A Feb 17 Kosmos-2003 GRU GK Soyuz KPL Landed KRZ Mar 3
19822 16A Feb 21 Akebono (EXOS-D) ISAS ISAS Mu-3SII/3 KagSC 75.1 deg 276x10293 km
19826 17A Feb 22 Kosmos-2004 VMS GK Kosmos II KPL 83.0 deg 974x1017 km
19851 18A Feb 28 Meteor-2 GUGMS GK Tsiklon II KPL 82.5 deg 941x959 km
19862 19A Mar 3 Kosmos-2005 GRU GK Soyuz KPL Landed KRZ? Apr 25
19875 20A Mar 6 JCSAT 1 JCSAT AE Ariane 44LP/V29 CSG GEO at 152 deg E
19876 20B Mar 6 Meteosat 4 (MOP 1) EUMETSAT " GEO at 0 deg W
19882 21A Mar 13 OV-103 Discovery NASA NASA STS/STS29 KSC Landed EAFB Mar 18
19883 21B Mar 13 TDRS 4 Contel " GEO 46W drifting E (6/4)
19893 22A Mar 14 Kosmos-2006 GRU GK Soyuz KPL Landed KRZ Mar 31
19895 23A Mar 14 Progress-41 GK GK Soyuz KB Reentered Apr 25
19900 24A Mar 23 Kosmos-2007 GRU GK Soyuz KB 64.7 deg, 228x267 km
19902 25A Mar 24 Kosmos-2008 VMF? GK Kosmos II KPL 74 deg 1393x1471 km
19903 25B Mar 24 Kosmos-2009 VMF? " 74 deg 1408x1472 km
19904 25C Mar 24 Kosmos-2010 VMF? " 74 deg 1424x1472 km
19905 25D Mar 24 Kosmos-2011 VMF? " 74 deg 1439x1472 km
19906 25E Mar 24 Kosmos-2012 VMF? " 74 deg 1456x1472 km
19907 25F Mar 24 Kosmos-2013 VMF? " 74 deg 1465x1480 km
19908 25G Mar 24 Kosmos-2014 VMF? " 74 deg 1471x1490 km
19909 25H Mar 24 Kosmos-2015 VMF? " 74 deg 1470x1510 km
19911 26A Mar 24 Delta Star (USA-36) SDIO USAF Delta 3920/183 CCAFS 47.7 deg 475x508 km
19919 27A Apr 2 Tele-X SSC AE Ariane 2/V30 CSG GEO 5 deg E
19921 28A Apr 4 Kosmos-2016 VMF GK Kosmos II KPL 83.0 deg 954x1016 km
19923 29A Apr 6 Kosmos-2017 GRU GK Soyuz KPL Landed KRZ Apr 20
19928 30A Apr 14 Raduga MSvyazi GK Proton (4) KB GEO
19938 31A Apr 20 Kosmos-2018 GRU GK Soyuz KPL Landed KRZ?, Jun 19
19941 32A Apr 26 Foton GK GK Soyuz KPL Landed KRZ May 12
19968 33A May 4 OV-104 Atlantis NASA NASA STS/STS-30 KSC Landed EAFB May 8
19969 33B May 5 Magellan (VRM) NASA " " In solar orbit
19972 34A May 5 Kosmos-2019 GRU GK Soyuz KPL Landed KRZ May 18
19976 35A May 10 Vortex 6? (USA-37) NSA USAF Titan34D-T CCAFS GEO
19986 36A May 17 Kosmos-2020 GRU GK Soyuz KB 64.8 deg 181x289 km
20000 37A May 24 Kosmos-2021 GRU GK Soyuz KB 69.9 deg 206x283 km
20006 38A May 25 Resurs-F TsP GUGK GK Soyuz KPL Landed KRZ Jun 17
20056 38C May 25 Pion KAI " 82.3 deg 220x234 km
20060 38D May 25 Pion KAI " 82.3 deg 231x243 km
20024 39A May 31 Kosmos-2022 GK GK Proton (4) KB 64.8 deg 19125x19134 km
20025 39B May 31 Kosmos-2023 GK " 64.8 deg 19094x19164 km
20026 39C May 31 Kosmos-2024 GK " 64.8 deg 19099x19144 km
20035 40A Jun 1 Kosmos-2025 GRU GK Soyuz KPL Landed KRZ Jun 15
20040 41A Jun 6 Superbird 1 JSCC AE Ariane 44L/V31 CSG GEO 158 deg E
20041 41B Jun 6 Kopernikus 1 DBP " GEO 26 deg E
20045 42A Jun 7 Kosmos-2026 VMF GK Kosmos II KPL 83.0 deg 953x1009 km
20052 43A Jun 8 Molniya-3 MSvyazi GK Molniya KPL 62.9 deg 583x39771 km
20061 44A Jun 10 Navstar GPS13 (USA38) USAF USAF Delta 6925/185 CCAFS 54.6 deg 19969x20369 km
20064 45A Jun 14 Kosmos-2027 PVO? GK Kosmos II KPL 74.0 deg 472x511 km
20066 46A Jun 15 DSP 14 (USA 39) USAF USAF Titan 4/IUS CCAFS GEO
20073 47A Jun 16 Kosmos-2028 GRU GK Soyuz KB 70.0 deg 207x249 km
20083 48A Jun 21 Raduga-1 MSvyazi GK Proton (4) KB GEO 49 deg E
20095 49A Jun 27 Resurs-F TsP GUGK GK Soyuz KPL 82.6 deg 258x271 km
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Acronyms:
AE Arianespace, Inc.
CCAFS Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida
Contel Continental Telephone Inc. (USA)
CSG Centre Spatial Guyanais, Kourou, Guyane, S. America
DBP Deutsche Bundespost (West German Post Office)
EAFB Edwards AFB, California
EUMETSAT European Meteorological Satellite Organization
GEO Geostationary Earth Orbit
GK Glavkosmos SSSR (Soviet Central Space Agency)
GPS Global Positioning System
GRU Glavnoye Razvedivatel'noye Upravileniye (Soviet Military Intelligence)
INTELSAT International Telecommunications Satellite Organization
IOR Indian Ocean Region
ISAS Institute for Space and Astronautical Sciences, Japan
JCSAT Japan Communications Satellite Co.
JSCC Japan Space Communications Co.
KagSC Kagoshima Space Center, Kagoshima, Japan
KAI Korolev Aviation Institute, Kubyshev, SSSR
KB Kosmodrom Baykonur, Kazakhstan
KGB Komitet Gosudarstvennoy Bezopasnosti SSSR (Soviet State Security Committee)
KPL Kosmodrom Plesetsk, Russia
KRZ Kazakhstan Recovery Zone (* my nomenclature)
KSC Kennedy Space Center, Florida
MOP Meteosat Operational Programme
MSvyazi Ministerstvo Svyazi (Soviet Ministry of Communications)
NASA US National Aeronautics and Space Administration
POR Pacific Ocean Region
PVO Protivo-Vosdushnaya Oborona (Soviet Air Defense Force)
SDIO Strategic Defense Initiative Organization, US Dept of Defense
SSC Swedish Space Corporation
STS Space Transportation System
TDRS Tracking and Data Relay Satellite
TsP GUGK Tsentr "Priroda",Glavniye Upravileniye Geodesiy i Kartographiy
("Nature" Center, Soviet Central Geodesy and Cartography Agency)
USAF United States Air Force
VMF Voenno-Morskoy Flot (Soviet Navy)
The identification of the Pion subsatellites with specific catalog numbers is tentative.
|
546.3 | U.S. Commercial ELV launches, 1986-1991 | MTWAIN::KLAES | All the Universe, or nothing! | Mon Jan 20 1992 16:27 | 75 |
| Article: 39378
From: [email protected]
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: United States Commercial ELV Launch Record (1986 to 1991)
Date: 17 Jan 92 02:12:07 GMT
Organization: University of South Australia
The dates listed are those for GMT. If anyone can fill in the question marks
or provide corrections please let me know.
UNITED STATES COMMERCIAL ELV LAUNCH RECORD (1986 to 1991)
Date Launch Vehicle Payload
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* 3 May 86 Delta 178 (3914) GOES-G/SARSAT
17 Sep 86 Atlas 52E NOAA-10(G)/SARSAT
14 Nov 86 Scout 199C (G-1) Polar Bear (Auroral studies)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
26 Feb 87 Delta 179 (3924) GOES-7(H)
20 Mar 87 Delta 182 (3920) PALAPA-5 (B2-P)
16 Sep 87 Scout 204C (G-1) OSCAR 27 and 28 (SOOS-2)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
25 Mar 88 Scout 206C (G-1) San Marco 5 (Upper atmosphere studies)
26 Apr 88 Scout 213C (G-1) OSCAR ?? and ?? (SOOS-3)
16 Jun 88 Scout ???? (G-1) NOVA-2(3)
25 Aug 88 Scout ???? (G-1) OSCAR 25 and 31 (SOOS-4)
24 Sep 88 Atlas 63E NOAA-11(H)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
27 Aug 89 Delta 187 (4925) Marcopolo-1 (BSB-R1)
18 Nov 89 Delta 189 (5920) COBE (Cosmic Background Explorer)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 Jan 90 Titan 3 JCSAT-2, SKYNET-4A
*14 Mar 90 Titan 3 INTELSAT VI-F3
5 Apr 90 Pegasus PEGSAT (Barium release experiment)
13 Apr 90 Delta 194 (6925) PALAPA-6 (B2-R)
9 May 90 Scout ???? (G-1) MACSAT 1 and 2
1 Jun 90 Delta 195 (6920) ROSAT (Roentgen Satellite)
12 Jun 90 Delta 196 (4925) INSAT-1D
23 Jun 90 Titan 3 INTELSAT VI-F4
25 Jul 90 Atlas 1 (AC-69) CRRES
17 Aug 90 Delta 198 (4925) Marcopolo-2 (BSB-R2)
26 Oct 90 Delta 200 (6925) INMARSAT II-F1
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
8 Jan 91 Delta 202 (6925) NATO IVA (North Atlantic Treaty Organisation)
8 Mar 91 Delta 203 (6925) INMARSAT II-F2
13 Apr 91 Delta 204 (7925) ASC-2 (American Satellite Company)
*18 Apr 91 Atlas 1 (AC-70) BS-3H (Japanese Broadcasting Satellite)
14 May 91 Atlas ??E NOAA-12(D)
29 May 91 Delta 205 (7925) AURORA II (Alaskan Communication Satellite)
7 Dec 91 Atlas 2 (AC-102) EUTELSAT II-F3
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Launch Failure
BSB British Satellite Broadcasting
CRRES Combined Release and Radiation Effects Satellite
EUTELSAT European Telecommunication Satellite
GOES Geostationary Operational Enviromental Satellite
INMARSAT International Maritime Satellite
INSAT Indian Communication and Meteorological Satellite
INTELSAT International Telecommunication Satellite
JCSAT Japanese Communications Satellite
MACSAT Multiple Access Communications Satellite
NOAA National Oceanic and Atmosphere Administration
NOVA Advance Navy Navigation Satellite
OSCAR Orbiting Satellite Carrying Amateur Radio
PALAPA Indonesian Geosynchronous Communications Satellite
SARSAT Satellite Aided Search and Rescue System
SOOS Stacked Oscar on Scout
SKYNET United Kingdom Military Communications Satellite
--
Steven Pietrobon, Australian Space Centre for Signal Processing
School of Electronic Engineering, University of South Australia
The Levels, SA 5095, Australia. [email protected]
|
546.4 | U.S. Military launches, 1986-1991 | MTWAIN::KLAES | All the Universe, or nothing! | Mon Jan 20 1992 16:29 | 97 |
| Article: 39379
From: [email protected]
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: United States Military Launch Record (1986 to 1991)
Date: 17 Jan 92 02:15:19 GMT
Organization: University of South Australia
The dates listed are those for GMT. All information was obtained from
public sources. If anyone can fill in the question marks or provide
corrections which is public knowledge please let me know. The date and
launch vehicle information is reliable. However, the payload information
is less reliable as the US Air Force usually won't say what the payload is.
UNITED STATES MILITARY LAUNCH RECORD (1986 to 1991)
USA Date Launch Vehicle Payload
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
15-17 9 Feb 86 Atlas 6004H NOSS-8
* 8 Apr 86 Titan 34D KH-9-F20 (Key Hole, Big Bird)
18-19 5 Sep 86 Delta 180 (3920) SDI (plume observations, stage intercep)
20 5 Dec 86 Atlas 5047D (AC-66) FLTSATCOM-F7
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
21 12 Feb 87 Titan 34B SDS or Jumpseat
* 26 Mar 87 Atlas 5046D (AC-67) FLTSATCOM-F6
22-25 15 May 87 Atlas 6003H NOSS-9
26 20 Jun 87 Atlas 59E DMSP-F8
27 26 Oct 87 Titan 34D KH-11-F8
28 28 Nov 87 Titan 34D/IUS DSP-F5R (Block 2)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
29 3 Feb 88 Atlas 54E DMSP-F9
30 8 Feb 88 Delta 181 (3910) SDI (tracked release of 14 sub-sats)
31* 2 Sep 88 Titan 34D/Transtage Chalet(Vortex) (ELINT)
32 5 Sep 88 Titan 2 NOSS-10
33 6 Nov 88 Titan 34D SDS or Jumpseat
34 2 Dec 88 Atlantis (STS-27) Lacrosse (radar reconnaissance)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
35 14 Feb 89 Delta 184 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-01 (GPS-14)
36 24 Mar 89 Delta 183 (3920) SDI Delta Star (plume observations)
37 10 May 89 Titan 34D/Transtage Chalet(Vortex)
38 10 Jun 89 Delta 185 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-02 (GPS-13)
39 15 Jun 89 Titan 4 DSP-F14 (Block 14)
40-41 8 Aug 89 Columbia (STS-28) KH-12, Ferret (ELINT)
42 18 Aug 89 Delta 186 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-03 (GPS-16)
43-44 4 Sep 89 Titan 34D/IUS DSCS III-F4 and F5
45 6 Sep 89 Titan 2 NOSS-11
46 25 Sep 89 Atlas ????? (AC-68) FLTSATCOM-F8
47 21 Oct 89 Delta 188 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-04 (GPS-19)
48 23 Nov 89 Discovery (STS-33) Magnum (ELINT)
49 11 Dec 89 Delta 190 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-05 (GPS-17)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
50 24 Jan 90 Delta 191 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-06 (GPS-18)
51-52 14 Feb 90 Delta 192 (6925) LACE, RME (Relay Mirror Experiment)
53 28 Feb 90 Atlantis (STS-36) KH-12 (AFP-731)
54 26 Mar 90 Delta 193 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-07 (GPS-20)
55 5 Apr 90 Pegasus GLOMR (Global Low Orbit Message Relay)
56-58 11 Apr 90 Atlas ??E/Altair POGS/SSR, TEX, SCE
59-62 8 Jun 90 Titan 4 KH-12
63 2 Aug 90 Delta 197 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-08 (GPS-21)
64 1 Oct 90 Delta 199 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-09 (GPS-22)
65 13 Nov 90 Titan 4 DSP-F15 (Block 14)
67 15 Nov 90 Atlantis (STS-38) Magnum (AFP-658)
66 26 Nov 90 Delta 201 (7925) NAVSTAR 2-10 (GPS-23)
68 1 Dec 90 Atlas ??E DMSP-F10 (Block 5D-2)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
69 8 Mar 91 Titan 4 Lacrosse
70 28 Apr 91 Discovery (STS-39) MPEC (Multipurpose Experiment Canister)
71 29 Jun 91 Scout 216C (G-1) REX (Radiation Experiment)
72-73 4 Jul 91 Delta 206 (7925) NAVSTAR 2-11 (GPS-24), LOSAT-X (SDI)
74-80 17 Jul 91 Pegasus MICROSAT-1 to 7 (small comms sats)
81 8 Nov 91 Titan 4 Lacrosse
82 24 Nov 91 Atlantis (STS-44) DSP-F16 (Block 14)
83 28 Nov 91 Atlas 53E DMSP-F11 (Block 5D-2)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Launch Failure
AFP Air Force Project
DMSP Defence Meteorological Satellite Program
DSCS Defence Satellite Communication System
DSP Defence Support Program
ELINT Electronic Intelligence Gathering Satellite
FLTSATCOM Fleet Satellite Communications
GPS Global Positioning System
IUS Inertial Upper Stage
LACE Low-power Atmospheric Compensation Experiment
NOSS Navy Ocean Surveillance System (White Cloud)
POGS Polar Orbiting Geomagnetic Survey
SCE Selective Communications Experiment
SDI Strategic Defence Initiative
SDS Satellite Data System
SSR Solid State Recorder
TEX Transceiver Experiment
--
Steven Pietrobon, Australian Space Centre for Signal Processing
School of Electronic Engineering, University of South Australia
The Levels, SA 5095, Australia. [email protected]
|
546.5 | U.S. Suborbital launches, 1989-1991 | MTWAIN::KLAES | All the Universe, or nothing! | Mon Jan 20 1992 16:31 | 44 |
| Article: 39380
From: [email protected]
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: United States Suborbital Launch Record (1989 to 1991)
Date: 17 Jan 92 02:18:03 GMT
Organization: University of South Australia
If anyone can provide corrections or additional information please let me know.
Space Services Incorporated - Starfire 1
American Rocket Company - Amroc
Orbital Sciences Corporation - Prospector (Castor 4), Aries, Talos-Castor 1
UNITED STATES SUBORBITAL LAUNCH RECORD (1989 to 1991)
Date Launch Vehicle Payload
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
29 Mar 89 Starfire 1 Consort 1 (6 microgravity experiments for UA)
* 5 Oct 89 Amroc Experiments for USAF and MIT
*15 Nov 89 Starfire 1 Consort 2
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
16 May 90 Starfire 1 Consort 3 (12 microgravity experiments)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*18 Jun 91 Prospector Joust 1 (material and biological experiments)
*20 Aug 91 Aries Red Tigress 1 (missile tracking & discrimination)
2 Sep 91 Talos-Castor 1 Zest 1 (tungsten dust release for SDIO)
12 Sep 91 Talos-Castor 1 Zest 2
14 Oct 91 Aries Red Tigress 2
16 Nov 91 Starfire 1 Consort 4 (9 microgravity experiments)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Launch Failure
MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology
SDIO Strategic Defence Initiative Organisation
UA University of Alabama
USAF United States Air Force
--
Steven Pietrobon, Australian Space Centre for Signal Processing
School of Electronic Engineering, University of South Australia
The Levels, SA 5095, Australia. [email protected]
"The dream of yesterday is the hope of today and the reality
of tomorrow." - Robert Goddard, American rocket pioneer
|
546.6 | RE 546.3-.5 | MTWAIN::KLAES | All the Universe, or nothing! | Fri Jan 24 1992 11:57 | 161 |
| Article: 39509
From: [email protected] (Jonathan McDowell)
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: Re: United States Commercial ELV Launch Record (1986 to 1991)
Date: 23 Jan 92 15:25:56 GMT
Organization: Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, MA, USA
From article <[email protected]>, by
[email protected]:
>Reply-To: [email protected]
> The dates listed are those for GMT. If anyone can fill in the question marks
> or provide corrections please let me know.
Here goes:
> UNITED STATES COMMERCIAL ELV LAUNCH RECORD (1986 to 1991)
Corrections:
> * 3 May 86 Delta 178 (3914) GOES-G/SARSAT
I don't think GOES G carried a SARSAT.
> 16 Sep 87 Scout 204C (G-1) OSCAR 27 and 28 (SOOS-2)
This should be O-27 and O-29 (not O-28)
> 26 Apr 88 Scout 213C (G-1) OSCAR ?? and ?? (SOOS-3)
This is O-23 and O-32 on S-211C (not S-213C).
> 16 Jun 88 Scout ???? (G-1) NOVA-2(3)
This is Nova-2 on S-213C.
> 25 Aug 88 Scout ???? (G-1) OSCAR 25 and 31 (SOOS-4)
This is S-214C.
> 9 May 90 Scout ???? (G-1) MACSAT 1 and 2
This is S-212C.
> 14 May 91 Atlas ??E NOAA-12(D)
This is Atlas 50E.
> OSCAR Orbiting Satellite Carrying Amateur Radio
Yes, but not in the context you use it here. For the Navy Scout
satellites Oscar is the letter O in the (aviation) phonetic alphabet,
standing for "Operational" (Operational Navy Navigation Satellite).
> Steven Pietrobon, Australian Space Centre for Signal Processing
> School of Electronic Engineering, University of South Australia
> The Levels, SA 5095, Australia. [email protected]
> UNITED STATES MILITARY LAUNCH RECORD (1986 to 1991)
> USA Date Launch Vehicle Payload
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
> 15-17 9 Feb 86 Atlas 6004H NOSS-8
This should be USA 15-18 (payload and 3 subsats).
The Delta 180 launch was USA 19 only.
> 21 12 Feb 87 Titan 34B SDS or Jumpseat
Serial number is Titan 3B-66. 34B series serial unknown.
Is probably SDS 7.
> 27 26 Oct 87 Titan 34D KH-11-F8
> 28 28 Nov 87 Titan 34D/IUS DSP-F5R (Block 2)
Serials are 34D-15 and 34D-8 respectively.
> 31* 2 Sep 88 Titan 34D/Transtage Chalet(Vortex) (ELINT)
Titan 34D-3.
> 32 5 Sep 88 Titan 2 NOSS-10
Titan 23G-1 is *NOT* NOSS-10 as reported in the press. Initial orbit
was above 80 deg inclination, I believe it is probably an advanced
Jumpseat mission.
> 33 6 Nov 88 Titan 34D SDS or Jumpseat
Titan 34D-14 is *NOT* SDS or Jumpseat as reported in the press. It is
almost certainly KH-11-F9 and has been observed by the Molczan network.
>37 10 May 89 Titan 34D/Transtage Chalet(Vortex)
Titan 34D-16.
> 43-44 4 Sep 89 Titan 34D/IUS DSCS III-F4 and F5
Titan 34D-2; payloads are DSCS III F-4 and (probably) the leftover
DSCS II F-16 (not III F5).
>56-58 11 Apr 90 Atlas ??E/Altair POGS/SSR, TEX, SCE
Atlas 28E.
>59-62 8 Jun 90 Titan 4 KH-12
Not clear whether USA 59 is a KH12. USA60-62 are Advanced NOSS 1.
>68 1 Dec 90 Atlas ??E DMSP-F10 (Block 5D-2)
Atlas 61E.
Here your USA numbers get a bit screwed up. REX did not get a USA
number (like the MACSATs, but unlike the STACKSATs; very odd. Someone
at USAF not being consistent). Neither did LOSAT-X (like most but not
all SDI payloads) or the Microsats. Here is the corrected list of
recent launches.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
USA Date Launch Vehicle Payload
- 29 Jun 91 Scout 216C (G-1) REX (Radiation Experiment)
71 4 Jul 91 Delta 206 (7925) NAVSTAR 2-11 (GPS-22), LOSAT-X (SDI)
- 17 Jul 91 Pegasus MICROSAT-1 to 7 (small comms sats)
72 8 Nov 91 Titan 4 ? (KH-12??)
74 8 Nov 91 )
76 8 Nov 91 ) Advanced NOSS 2 cluster
77 8 Nov 91 )
75 24 Nov 91 Atlantis (STS-44) DSP-F16 (Block 14)
73 28 Nov 91 Atlas 53E DMSP-F11 (Block 5D-2)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Also your recent GPS numbers are mixed up. Corrections are:
64 1 Oct 90 Delta 199 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-09 (GPS-15)
66 26 Nov 90 Delta 201 (7925) NAVSTAR 2-10 (GPS-23)
71 4 Jul 91 Delta 206 (7925) NAVSTAR 2-11 (GPS-22)
> UNITED STATES SUBORBITAL LAUNCH RECORD (1989 to 1991)
Note that this is only the suborbital *commercial* launch list. NASA
and USAF launched many vehicles from 1989 to 1991. I don't have the
1991 list in my records yet, but for 1989-90 I show 23 Terrier family
vehicles (Terrier Malemute, Black Brant 9, Black Brant 10); 5 Talos
boosted missions (Black Brant 11, 12); 3 Aries missions, 1 ERIS, 4
Taurus (Taurus Orion, Taurus Nike Tomahawk), 3 Nike Orion, 5 Nike
Black Brant 5, plus of course various Minuteman, Peacekeeper, and
Trident test launches. I don't have time to list them but a new book
by Joel Powell of Canada is going to have a lot of this data in.
.-----------------------------------------------------------------------------.
| Jonathan McDowell | phone : (617) 495-7176 |
| Harvard-Smithsonian Center for | |
| Astrophysics | |
| 60 Garden St, MS4 | |
| Cambridge MA 02138 | inter : [email protected] |
| USA | |
'-----------------------------------------------------------------------------'
|
546.7 | ELV Launch Manifest for CY1993 | VERGA::KLAES | I, Robot | Fri Dec 11 1992 08:57 | 60 |
| Article: 52995
From: [email protected]
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: ELV Manifest CY93
Date: 8 Dec 92 22:17:22 EST
Organization: NASA, Kennedy Space Center
Hello, Someone had asked me a while back for an expendable launch
manifest. A little late but here is what I managed to dig up.
ELV Launch Manifest for CY93 (from manifest dated 11/16/92)
Date Vehicle Pri/Sec Payload Launch Site
01/93 Pegasus ALEXIS B-52/DFRF
01/93 Ariane 4 (42P) GALAXY 4 French Guiana
03/93 Atlas I UHF-1 CCAFS
03/93 Conestoga COMET 1 WFF
03/93 Ariane 4 (44L) HISPASAT 1B/INSAT 2B French Guiana
03/93 Delta II GPS?? / SEDS-1 CCAFS
05/93 Scout RADCAL VAFB
05/93 Pegasus APEX B-52/DFRF
05/93 Pegasus LEAP-7 B-52/DFRF
05/93 Ariane 4 (44L) ASTRA 1C/ARSENE French Guiana
05/93 Delta II GPS?? / PMQ CCAFS
2Q/93 Atlas I UHF-2 CCAFS
06/93 Atlas E NOAA-I VAFB
07/93 Scout MSTI-II VAFB
08/93 Pegasus ORBCOMM FDM L-1011
09/93 Pegasus SEASTAR L-1011
09/93 Ariane 4 (40) EPOT-3/ASAP-4 French Guiana
10/93 Pegasus SLV-1 L-1011
10/93 Atlas IIAS TELSTAR 4/F1 CCAFS
10/93 Ariane 4 (44LP) INTELSAT VII F1 French Guiana
11/93 Ariane 4 (44LP) SOLIDARIDAD 1/MOP-3 French Guiana
12/93 Delta II WIND CCAFS
12/93 Atlas GOES-I CCAFS
12/93 Pegasus STEP-2 L-1011
12/93 Delta II NATO IV CCAFS
12/93 Ariane 4 (44L) DIREC-TV 1/THAICOM 1 French Guiana
This list is only what NASA is carrying on its unclassified schedule.
The GPS launches are only a guess on my part as the manifest only list
the secondary payloads for those launches. Even though the local paper
posts the launch date and time for GPS missions the Air Force and
McDonnell Douglas consider it to be sensitive (I guess they don't read
the paper :) )
This is also a first cut at this list. When I get updates I will post
them. Please Don't ask me what the payloads are (they could be typos I
got them from a Faxed copy of the manifest) also I'm just an Main
Engine guy and don't deal directly with the Payloads.
A final note since I come from the shuttle world naturally I don't
believe schedules (any schedule is out of date the moment it is
printed). For what it is worth.
----------------------------------------------------------------
Bob Waterman [Aqua] / NASA Space Shuttle Main Engine Avionics
[email protected]
----------------------------------------------------------------
|
546.8 | U.S. Commercial Launches 1986-1992 | VERGA::KLAES | I, Robot | Fri Jan 15 1993 16:04 | 104 |
| Article: 55014
From: [email protected]
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: United States Commercial Launch Record (1986 to 1992)
Date: 14 Jan 93 10:04:57 +1030
Organization: University of South Australia
The dates listed are those for GMT. If anyone can fill in the question marks
or provide corrections please let me know.
UNITED STATES COMMERCIAL ELV LAUNCH RECORD (1986 to 1991)
Date Launch Vehicle Payload
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* 3 May 86 Delta 178 (3914) GOES-G
17 Sep 86 Atlas 52E NOAA-10(G)/SARSAT
14 Nov 86 Scout 199C (G-1) Polar Bear (P87-1, Auroral studies)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
26 Feb 87 Delta 179 (3924) GOES-7(H)
20 Mar 87 Delta 182 (3920) PALAPA-5 (B2-P)
16 Sep 87 Scout 204C (G-1) OSCAR 27 and 29 (SOOS-2)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
25 Mar 88 Scout 206C (G-1) San Marco 5 (Upper atmosphere studies)
26 Apr 88 Scout 211C (G-1) OSCAR 23 and 32 (SOOS-3)
16 Jun 88 Scout 213C (G-1) NOVA-2
25 Aug 88 Scout 214C (G-1) OSCAR 25 and 31 (SOOS-4)
24 Sep 88 Atlas 63E NOAA-11(H)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
27 Aug 89 Delta 187 (4925) Marcopolo-1 (BSB-R1)
18 Nov 89 Delta 189 (5920) COBE (Cosmic Background Explorer)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 Jan 90 Titan 3 JCSAT-2, SKYNET-4A
*14 Mar 90 Titan 3 INTELSAT VI-F3
5 Apr 90 Pegasus F1 PEGSAT (Barium release experiment)
13 Apr 90 Delta 194 (6925) PALAPA-6 (B2-R)
9 May 90 Scout 212C (G-1) MACSAT 1 and 2
1 Jun 90 Delta 195 (6920) ROSAT (Roentgen Satellite)
12 Jun 90 Delta 196 (4925) INSAT-1D
23 Jun 90 Titan 3 INTELSAT VI-F4
25 Jul 90 Atlas I (AC-69) CRRES
17 Aug 90 Delta 198 (4925) Marcopolo-2 (BSB-R2)
26 Oct 90 Delta 200 (6925) INMARSAT II-F1
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
8 Jan 91 Delta 202 (6925) NATO IVA (North Atlantic Treaty Organisation)
8 Mar 91 Delta 203 (6925) INMARSAT II-F2
13 Apr 91 Delta 204 (7925) ASC-2 (American Satellite Company)
*18 Apr 91 Atlas I (AC-70) BS-3H (Japanese Broadcasting Satellite)
14 May 91 Atlas 50E NOAA-12(D)
29 May 91 Delta 205 (7925) AURORA II (Alaskan Communication Satellite)
29 Jun 91 Scout 216C (G-1) REX (Radiation Experiment)
4 Jul 91 Delta 206 (7925) LOSAT-X (SDI)
17 Jul 91 Pegasus F2-HAPS MICROSAT-1 to 7 (small comms sats)
7 Dec 91 Atlas II (AC-102) EUTELSAT II-F3
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Launch Failure
BSB British Satellite Broadcasting
CRRES Combined Release and Radiation Effects Satellite
EUTELSAT European Telecommunication Satellite
GOES Geostationary Operational Enviromental Satellite
INMARSAT International Maritime Satellite
INSAT Indian Communication and Meteorological Satellite
INTELSAT International Telecommunication Satellite
JCSAT Japanese Communications Satellite
MACSAT Multiple Access Communications Satellite
NOAA National Oceanic and Atmosphere Administration
NOVA Advance Navy Navigation Satellite
OSCAR Operational Navy Navigation Satellite
PALAPA Indonesian Geosynchronous Communications Satellite
SARSAT Satellite Aided Search and Rescue System
SDIO Strategic Defence Initiative
SOOS Stacked Oscar on Scout
SKYNET United Kingdom Military Communications Satellite
UNITED STATES COMMERCIAL ELV LAUNCH RECORD (1992)
Date Launch Vehicle Payload
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
14 Mar 92 Atlas I (AC-72) GALAXY-V
14 May 92 Delta 209 (7925) PALAPA-7 (B-4)
7 Jun 92 Delta 210 (6920) EUVE (Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer)
10 Jun 92 Atlas IIA (AC-205) INTELSAT K
3 Jul 92 Scout S215C SAMPEX
24 Jul 92 Delta 212 (6925) GEOTAIL, DUVE (Diffuse Ultraviolet Experiment)
*22 Aug 92 Atlas I (AC-71) GALAXY-IR
31 Aug 92 Delta 213 (7925) SATCOM-C4
25 Sep 92 Titan III Mars Observer
12 Oct 92 Delta 215 (7925) DFS-3 (Deutsche Fernmeldesatelliten System)
21 Nov 92 Scout S210C MSTI-1 (Miniature Seeker Technology Integration)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Launch Failure
GALAXY Hughes communications satellite
INTELSAT International Telecommunication Satellite
PALAPA Indonesian Geosynchronous Communications Satellite
SAMPEX Solar, Anomalous, and Magnetospheric Particle Explorer
GEOTAIL NASA-Japan mission to explore Earth's Geotail
SATCOM GE Astro Space (formerly RCA) communications satellite
--
Steven S. Pietrobon, Australian Space Centre for Signal Processing
Signal Processing Research Institute, University of South Australia
The Levels, SA 5095, Australia. [email protected]
|
546.9 | U.S. Military Launches 1986-1992 | VERGA::KLAES | I, Robot | Fri Jan 15 1993 16:04 | 125 |
| Article: 55015
From: [email protected]
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: United States Military Launch Record (1986 to 1992)
Date: 14 Jan 93 10:06:34 +1030
Organization: University of South Australia
The dates listed are those for GMT. All information was obtained from
public sources. If anyone can fill in the question marks or provide
corrections which is public knowledge please let me know. The date and
launch vehicle information is reliable. However, the payload information
is less reliable as the US Air Force usually won't say what the payload is.
Many thanks go to Jonathon McDowell <[email protected]> for his
corrections to this list.
UNITED STATES MILITARY LAUNCH RECORD (1986 to 1991)
USA Date Launch Vehicle Payload
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
15-18 9 Feb 86 Atlas 6004H NOSS-8
* 18 Apr 86 Titan 34D-9 KH-9-F20 (Key Hole, Big Bird)
19 5 Sep 86 Delta 180 (3920) DM43? (plume observation, stage intercep)
20 5 Dec 86 Atlas 5047G (AC-66) FLTSATCOM-F7
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
21 12 Feb 87 Titan 3B-66 SDS-7
* 26 Mar 87 Atlas 5046G (AC-67) FLTSATCOM-F6
22-25 15 May 87 Atlas 6003H or 6005H NOSS-9
26 20 Jun 87 Atlas 59E DMSP-F8
27 26 Oct 87 Titan 34D-15 KH-11-F8
28 29 Nov 87 Titan 34D-8/TS DSP-F5R (Block 2)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
29 3 Feb 88 Atlas 54E DMSP-F9
30 8 Feb 88 Delta 181 (3920) TVE? (Thrust Vector Experiment)
31* 2 Sep 88 Titan 34D-3/TS Chalet(Vortex) (ELINT)
32 5 Sep 88 Titan 23G-1 ?
33 6 Nov 88 Titan 34D-14 KH-11-F9
34 2 Dec 88 Atlantis (STS-27) Lacrosse 1 (radar reconnaissance)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
35 14 Feb 89 Delta 184 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-01 (GPS-14)
36 24 Mar 89 Delta 183 (3920) SDI Delta Star (plume observations)
37 10 May 89 Titan 34D-16/TS Chalet(Vortex)
38 10 Jun 89 Delta 185 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-02 (GPS-13)
39 15 Jun 89 Titan 402/IUS DSP-F14 (Block 14)
40-41 8 Aug 89 Columbia (STS-28) ADVANCED JUMPSEAT 1, Ferret (ELINT)
42 18 Aug 89 Delta 186 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-03 (GPS-16)
43-44 4 Sep 89 Titan 34D-2/TS? DSCS II-F16, DSCS III-F4
45 6 Sep 89 Titan 23G-2 ?
46 25 Sep 89 Atlas 5048G? (AC-68) FLTSATCOM-F8
47 21 Oct 89 Delta 188 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-04 (GPS-19)
48 23 Nov 89 Discovery (STS-33) Magnum (ELINT)
49 11 Dec 89 Delta 190 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-05 (GPS-17)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Launch Failure
DMSP Defence Meteorological Satellite Program
DSCS Defence Satellite Communication System
DSP Defence Support Program
ELINT Electronic Intelligence Gathering Satellite
FLTSATCOM Fleet Satellite Communications
GPS Global Positioning System
IUS Inertial Upper Stage
JUMPSEAT Electronic Intelligence Gathering
NOSS Navy Ocean Surveillance System (White Cloud)
SDI Strategic Defence Initiative
SDS Satellite Data System
TS Transtage
UNITED STATES MILITARY LAUNCH RECORD (1990 to 1992)
USA Date Launch Vehicle Payload
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
50 24 Jan 90 Delta 191 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-06 (GPS-18)
51-52 14 Feb 90 Delta 192 (6925) LACE, RME (Relay Mirror Experiment)
53 28 Feb 90 Atlantis (STS-36) KH-12 (AFP-731)
54 26 Mar 90 Delta 193 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-07 (GPS-20)
55 5 Apr 90 Pegasus GLOMR (Global Low Orbit Message Relay)
56-58 11 Apr 90 Atlas 28E/Altair POGS/SSR, TEX, SCE
59-62 8 Jun 90 Titan 403 ?, NOSS 2-1
63 2 Aug 90 Delta 197 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-08 (GPS-21)
64 1 Oct 90 Delta 199 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-09 (GPS-15)
65 13 Nov 90 Titan 402/IUS DSP-F15 (Block 14)
67 15 Nov 90 Atlantis (STS-38) Magnum (AFP-658)
66 26 Nov 90 Delta 201 (7925) NAVSTAR 2A-01, (2-10, GPS-23)
68 1 Dec 90 Atlas 61E DMSP-F10 (Block 5D-2)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
69 8 Mar 91 Titan 405 Lacrosse 2
70 28 Apr 91 Discovery (STS-39) MPEC (Multipurpose Experiment Canister)
71 4 Jul 91 Delta 206 (7925) NAVSTAR 2A-02 (2-11, GPS-22)
72,74,76,77 8 Nov 91 Titan 405 KH-12?, NOSS 2-2
75 24 Nov 91 Atlantis (STS-44) DSP-F16 (Block 14)
73 28 Nov 91 Atlas 53E DMSP-F11 (Block 5D-2)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
78 11 Feb 92 Atlas II (AC-101) DSCS III-F5 (38-01), IABS-01
79 23 Feb 92 Delta 207 (7925) NAVSTAR 2A-03 (2-12, GPS-25)
80 10 Apr 92 Delta 208 (7925) NAVSTAR 2A-04 (2-13, GPS-28)
81 25 Apr 92 Titan 23G-3 ?
82 2 Jul 92 Atlas II (AC-103) DSCS III-F6 (38-02), IABS-02
83 7 Jul 92 Delta 211 (7925) NAVSTAR 2A-05 (2-14, GPS-26)
84 9 Sep 92 Delta 214 (7925) NAVSTAR 2A-06 (2-15, GPS-27)
85 22 Nov 92 Delta 216 (7925) NAVSTAR 2A-07 (2-16, GPS-32)
86 28 Nov 92 Titan 404 KH-12?
88 2 Dec 92 Discovery (STS-53) ADVANCED JUMPSEAT 2
87 18 Dec 92 Delta 217 (7925) NAVSTAR 2A-08 (2-17, GPS-29)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
AFP Air Force Project
DMSP Defence Meteorological Satellite Program
DSCS Defence Satellite Communication System
DSP Defence Support Program
GPS Global Positioning System
JUMPSEAT Electronic Intelligence Gathering
KH-12 Photo-reconnaisance replacement for KH-11, real name not known
LACE Low-power Atmospheric Compensation Experiment
MSTI Miniature Seeker Technology Integration (SDI)
NOSS Navy Ocean Surveillance System (White Cloud)
POGS Polar Orbiting Geomagnetic Survey
SCE Selective Communications Experiment
SSR Solid State Recorder
TEX Transceiver Experiment
--
Steven S. Pietrobon, Australian Space Centre for Signal Processing
Signal Processing Research Institute, University of South Australia
The Levels, SA 5095, Australia. [email protected]
|
546.10 | U.S. Suborbital Launches 1989-1992 | VERGA::KLAES | I, Robot | Fri Jan 15 1993 16:05 | 49 |
| Article: 55016
From: [email protected]
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: United States Suborbital Launch Record (1989 to 1992)
Date: 14 Jan 93 10:08:16 +1030
Organization: University of South Australia
If anyone can provide corrections or additional information please let me know.
EER Systems Corporation - Starfire 1
American Rocket Company - Amroc
Orbital Sciences Corporation - Prospector (Castor-4), Aries, Castor-4A/Orbus-1,
Talos-Castor 1
UNITED STATES COMMERCIAL SUBORBITAL LAUNCH RECORD (1989 to 1992)
Date Launch Vehicle Payload
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
29 Mar 89 Starfire 1 Consort 1 (6 microgravity experiments for UA)
* 5 Oct 89 Amroc Experiments for USAF and MIT
*15 Nov 89 Starfire 1 Consort 2
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
16 May 90 Starfire 1 Consort 3 (12 microgravity experiments)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*18 Jun 91 Prospector Joust 1 (material and biological experiments)
*20 Aug 91 Aries Red Tigress 1
2 Sep 91 Talos-Castor 1 ZEST-1 (tungsten dust release for SDIO)
12 Sep 91 Talos-Castor 1 ZEST-2
14 Oct 91 Aries Red Tigress 2 (LEAP-1)
16 Nov 91 Starfire 1 Consort 4 (9 microgravity experiments)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
19 Jun 92 Aries LEAP-2
10 Sep 92 Starfire 1 Consort 5
*16 Oct 92 Castor/Orbus BP-TD (Brilliant Pebbles)
*22 Oct 92 Aries LEAP-3
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Launch Failure
LEAP Missile Tracking and Discrimination for SDIO
MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology
SDIO Strategic Defence Initiative Organisation
UA University of Alabama
USAF United States Air Force
--
Steven S. Pietrobon, Australian Space Centre for Signal Processing
Signal Processing Research Institute, University of South Australia
The Levels, SA 5095, Australia. [email protected]
|
546.11 | ATLAS, DELTA, and TITAN Launches, 1986-1992 | VERGA::KLAES | I, Robot | Tue Jan 19 1993 14:16 | 214 |
| Article: 55267
From: [email protected] (Brian Stuart Thorn)
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: Atlas Launch Record (1986-1992)
Date: Mon, 18 Jan 93 22:02:00 PST
Organization: The Portal System (TM)
Steven S. Pietrobon recently posted launch records for Ariane, Shuttle,
U.S. military, and U.S. commercial space launches.
This information was very interesting, but I have been looking for
launch records for the individual boosters, Delta, Titan, and Atlas.
For those of you who are also looking for this information, I have
taken Mr. Pietrobon's data and broken it down by booster. Therefore,
to save anyone else alot of cutting and pasting, here is that
information.
ATLAS LAUNCH RECORD (1986-PRESENT)
Date Vehicle Payload
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
9 Feb 86 Atlas 6004H NOSS-8
5 Dec 86 Atlas 5047G (AC-66) FLTSATCOM-F7
*26 Mar 87 Atlas 5046G (AC-67) FLTSATCOM-F6
15 May 87 Atlas 6003H or 6005H NOSS-9
20 Jun 87 Atlas 59E DMSP-F8
3 Feb 88 Atlas 54E DMSP-F9
25 Sep 89 Atlas 5048G? (AC-68) FLTSATCOM-F8
11 Apr 90 Atlas 28E/Altair POGS/SSR, TEX, SCE
25 Jul 90 Atlas I (AC-69) CRRES
1 Dec 90 Atlas 61E DMSP-F10 (Block 5D-2)
*18 Apr 91 Atlas I (AC-70) BS-3H (Japanese Broadcasting Satellite)
28 Nov 91 Atlas 53E DMSP-F11 (Block 5D-2)
7 Dec 91 Atlas II (AC-102) EUTELSAT II-F3
14 Mar 92 Atlas I (AC-72) GALAXY-V
11 Feb 92 Atlas II (AC-101) DSCS III-F5 (38-01), IABS-01
10 Jun 92 Atlas IIA (AC-205) INTELSAT K
2 Jul 92 Atlas II (AC-103) DSCS III-F6 (38-02), IABS-02
*22 Aug 92 Atlas I (AC-71) GALAXY-IR
* - Launch Failure
AC - Atlas-Centaur
If anyone has a complete Atlas launch record from first orbital flight
through 1985, I'm sure I am not the only one who would like to see it
posted here.
Special thanks to Steven S. Pietrobon for the original data. Please
reference his recent postings for acronym explantations.
-Brian
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Brian S. Thorn "If ignorance is bliss,
[email protected] this must be heaven."
-Diane Chambers, "Cheers"
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Article: 55268
From: [email protected] (Brian Stuart Thorn)
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: Delta Launch Record (1986-1992)
Date: Mon, 18 Jan 93 22:02:46 PST
Organization: The Portal System (TM)
Steven S. Pietrobon recently posted launch records for Ariane, Shuttle,
U.S. military, and U.S. commercial space launches.
This information was very interesting, but I have been looking for
launch records for the individual boosters, Delta, Titan, and Atlas.
For those of you who are also looking for this information, I have
taken Mr. Pietrobon's data and broken it down by booster. Therefore,
to save anyone else alot of cutting and pasting, here is that
information.
DELTA LAUNCH RECORD (1986-PRESENT)
Date Vehicle Payload
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* 3 May 86 Delta 178 (3914) GOES-G
5 Sep 86 Delta 180 (3920) DM43? (plume observation, stage intercept)
26 Feb 87 Delta 179 (3924) GOES-7(H)
20 Mar 87 Delta 182 (3920) PALAPA-5 (B2-P)
8 Feb 88 Delta 181 (3920) TVE? (Thrust Vector Experiment)
14 Feb 89 Delta 184 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-01 (GPS-14)
24 Mar 89 Delta 183 (3920) SDI Delta Star (plume observations)
10 Jun 89 Delta 185 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-02 (GPS-13)
18 Aug 89 Delta 186 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-03 (GPS-16)
27 Aug 89 Delta 187 (4925) Marcopolo-1 (BSB-R1)
21 Oct 89 Delta 188 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-04 (GPS-19)
18 Nov 89 Delta 189 (5920) COBE (Cosmic Background Explorer)
11 Dec 89 Delta 190 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-05 (GPS-17)
24 Jan 90 Delta 191 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-06 (GPS-18)
14 Feb 90 Delta 192 (6925) LACE, RME (Relay Mirror Experiment)
26 Mar 90 Delta 193 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-07 (GPS-20)
13 Apr 90 Delta 194 (6925) PALAPA-6 (B2-R)
1 Jun 90 Delta 195 (6920) ROSAT (Roentgen Satellite)
12 Jun 90 Delta 196 (4925) INSAT-1D
2 Aug 90 Delta 197 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-08 (GPS-21)
17 Aug 90 Delta 198 (4925) Marcopolo-2 (BSB-R2)
1 Oct 90 Delta 199 (6925) NAVSTAR 2-09 (GPS-15)
26 Oct 90 Delta 200 (6925) INMARSAT II-F1
26 Nov 90 Delta 201 (7925) NAVSTAR 2A-01, (2-10, GPS-23)
8 Jan 91 Delta 202 (6925) NATO IVA (North Atlantic Treaty Organisation)
8 Mar 91 Delta 203 (6925) INMARSAT II-F2
13 Apr 91 Delta 204 (7925) ASC-2 (American Satellite Company)
29 May 91 Delta 205 (7925) AURORA II (Alaskan Communication Satellite)
4 Jul 91 Delta 206 (7925) NAVSTAR 2A-02 (2-11, GPS-22), LOSATX (SDI)
23 Feb 92 Delta 207 (7925) NAVSTAR 2A-03 (2-12, GPS-25)
10 Apr 92 Delta 208 (7925) NAVSTAR 2A-04 (2-13, GPS-28)
14 May 92 Delta 209 (7925) PALAPA-7 (B-4)
7 Jun 92 Delta 210 (6920) EUVE (Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer)
7 Jul 92 Delta 211 (7925) NAVSTAR 2A-05 (2-14, GPS-26)
24 Jul 92 Delta 212 (6925) GEOTAIL, DUVE (Diffuse Ultraviolet Experiment)
31 Aug 92 Delta 213 (7925) SATCOM-C4
9 Sep 92 Delta 214 (7925) NAVSTAR 2A-06 (2-15, GPS-27)
12 Oct 92 Delta 215 (7925) DFS-3 (Deutsche Fernmeldesatelliten System)
22 Nov 92 Delta 216 (7925) NAVSTAR 2A-07 (2-16, GPS-32)
18 Dec 92 Delta 217 (7925) NAVSTAR 2A-08 (2-17, GPS-29)
* Launch Failure
Delta 206 was listed on both the military and commercial launch records.
If anyone has a complete Delta launch record from first orbital flight
through 1985, I'm sure I am not the only one who would like to see it
posted here.
Special thanks to Steven S. Pietrobon for the original data. Please
reference his recent postings for acronym explantations.
-Brian
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Brian S. Thorn "If ignorance is bliss,
[email protected] this must be heaven."
-Diane Chambers, "Cheers"
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Article: 55269
From: [email protected] (Brian Stuart Thorn)
Newsgroups: sci.space
Subject: Titan Launch Record (1986-1992)
Date: Mon, 18 Jan 93 22:03:22 PST
Organization: The Portal System (TM)
Steven S. Pietrobon recently posted launch records for Ariane, Shuttle,
U.S. military, and U.S. commercial space launches.
This information was very interesting, but I have been looking for
launch records for the individual boosters, Delta, Titan, and Atlas.
For those of you who are also looking for this information, I have
taken Mr. Pietrobon's data and broken it down by booster. Therefore,
to save anyone else alot of cutting and pasting, here is that
information.
TITAN LAUNCH RECORD (1986-PRESENT)
Date Vehicle Payload
---------------------------------------------------------------
* 18 Apr 86 Titan 34D-9 KH-9-F20 (Key Hole, Big Bird)
12 Feb 87 Titan 3B-66 SDS-7
26 Oct 87 Titan 34D-15 KH-11-F8
29 Nov 87 Titan 34D-8/TS DSP-F5R (Block 2)
* 2 Sep 88 Titan 34D-3/TS Chalet (Vortex) (ELINT)
5 Sep 88 Titan 23G-1 ?
6 Nov 88 Titan 34D-14 KH-11-F9
10 May 89 Titan 34D-16/TS Chalet (Vortex)
15 Jun 89 Titan 402/IUS DSP-F14 (Block 14)
4 Sep 89 Titan 34D-2/TS? DSCS II-F16, DSCS III-F4
6 Sep 89 Titan 23G-2 ?
1 Jan 90 Titan 3 JCSAT-2, SKYNET-4A
* 14 Mar 90 Titan 3 INTELSAT VI-F3
8 Jun 90 Titan 403 ?, NOSS 2-1
23 Jun 90 Titan 3 INTELSAT VI-F4
13 Nov 90 Titan 402/IUS DSP-F15 (Block 14)
8 Mar 91 Titan 405 Lacrosse 2
8 Nov 91 Titan 405 KH-12?, NOSS 2-2
25 Apr 92 Titan 23G-3 ?
25 Sep 92 Titan 3 Mars Observer
28 Nov 92 Titan 404 KH-12?
* Launch Failure
Titan 3B is a Titan III minus the solid boosters.
Titan 3 is the Commercial Titan III,
Titan 34D is the final variant of the military Titan III series.
Titan 23G series are the refurbished Titan II ICBMs.
Titan 4xx series are the Titan IV family.
I was unaware of a Titan 34D failure in September 1988. Does anyone
have any information on the cause of this failure?
If anyone has a complete Titan launch record from first orbital flight
through 1985, I'm sure I am not the only one who would like to see it
posted here.
Special thanks to Steven S. Pietrobon for the original data. Please
reference his recent postings for acronym explantations.
-Brian
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Brian S. Thorn "If ignorance is bliss,
[email protected] this must be heaven."
-Diane Chambers, "Cheers"
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
546.12 | ELV Specifications | MTWAIN::KLAES | Keep Looking Up | Mon May 23 1994 18:21 | 318 |
| Article: 2234
From: [email protected] (Marcus Lindroos INF)
Newsgroups: sci.space.policy,sci.space.tech
Subject: ELV SPECIFICATIONS (FAQ list suggestion)
Date: Sat, 21 May 1994 12:16:28 GMT
Organization: ABO AKADEMI UNIVERSITY, FINLAND
Below is a list of data for all launchers used for launching manned
spacecraft and/or planetary probes! There may be some inaccuracies so
feel free to post your additions/updates.
---
In case you are not familiar with the rocket equation, it is fairly
easy to calculate a rocket's maximum final velocity (in meters per second)
if its dry weight, gross weight and specific impulse (=exhaust velocity in
meters/second * 9.801) as well as the weight of its payload are known. The
formula is:
1
vi=(Isp*9.801) * LN --------------------------------------------------------
payload dry wt.
------------------- * (1 - (dry wt./gross wt.)) + ---------
(payload+gross wt.) gross wt.
The required velocity (or delta-V) to reach low Earth orbit is in the region
of 9 to 9.5km/s depending on various factors. To reach the Moon, a spacecraft
needs an additional delta-V of 3.2km/s. Venus and Mars require about
3.5-3.7km/s. A 36,000km/s geostationary orbit (GSO) requires a dV of 3.9km/s,
an elliptical 200x36,000km geostationary transfer orbit (GTO) requires about
2.4km/s.
---
The thrust is listed in kilonewtons (kN). The relationship between thrust
and Isp is: thrust(N)=mass flow/sec.(kg) * (Isp*9.801)
All figures for Isp and thrust are the theoretical values in a vacuum. For
1st & second stages, I have sometimes listed the sea level thrust/Isp as well.
Stage 0 indicates that the rocket(s) in question acts as a booster and fires
at the same time as the first stage.
---
Thanks to Ken O'Connell, Tom Frieling, Peter Venetoklis, Henry Spencer and
countless others for providing the data I was unable to find.
U N I T E D S T A T E S
-------------------------
GEMINI-TITAN II:
---------------
Stage Engine: Fuel: Thrust: (Mass ratio/spec.impulse)
1:Aero LR-87 (x2) Aerozine 50/N2O4 1913kN (7t?/141t?)Isp=295-302s?
2:Aero LR-91 Aerozine 50/N2O4 445kN (2.9/38t?) Isp=316s?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
185t (+3.8t 2-man Gemini spacecraft)
TITAN IIIE-CENTAUR:
------------------
0x2:UA 1205 Solid 10504kN (2x(37t/247t),Isp=271.6s[vac])
1 :Aero YLR870AJ11 Aerozine 50/N2O4 2358kN (7t/141t, Isp=302s)
2 :Aero YLR870AJ11 Aerozine 50/N2O4 445kN (2.9t/38t, Isp=316s)
3 :Centaur D-1T LOX/LH2 133kN (2.3t/19t, Isp=430s)
---------------------------------------------------------------------
640t (Viking, Voyager etc.. CAPABILITY: 3.356t to GSO, 3.8t to Venus/Mars,
0.227-0.8t to Jupiter)
DELTA E DSV-3E:
--------------
0x3:Thio Castor1 Solid 697kN (3x(.69/4.42t), Isp=283.6s[vac])
1 :Rdyne LR79-NA13 LOX/RJ-1 779kN (3.6t/49t, Isp=?)
2 :Aero AJ-10-118E IRFNA/UDMH 35kN (.56t/5.3t,Isp=300s?)
3 :Hercules X-258 Solid 12kN (0.039t/.25t, Isp=?)
---------------------------------------------------------------------
68t (Explorer 29, Pioneer 6 etc.. 200kg payload to geostationary transfer
orbit)
ATLAS-CENTAUR:
-------------
0:RdyneLR89-NA5(x2) LOX/RP-1 1633kN (Boosters,130s burn.,3.45t?)
1:RdyneLR105-NA5+ LOX/RP-1 262kN (5.2t/117t[Atlas D])
2:P&W RL-10-A3(x2) LOX/LH2 133kN (1.7t/15.6t, Isp=430s)
--------------------------------------------------------------------
136.055t (Surveyor)
ATLAS-AGENA (B/D)
----------------
0:RdyneLR89-NA5(x2) LOX/RP-1 1468kN (Boosters,130s burn.)
1:RdyneLR105-NA5+ LOX/RP-1 262kN (5.2t/117t[Atlas D])
2:Bell 8096 IRFNA/UDMH 67-71kN (0.9t/7.05t, Isp=290s)
--------------------------------------------------------------------
124.7t (Ranger; Mariner 4&5, Lunar Orbiter; 2.268t to 480km orbit)
US UPPER STAGES:
CENTAUR G' (Titan IV;LOX/LH2 fuel)
---------
3.6t/23.9t, Isp=444 sec.
PAM-D (Shuttle,Delta;solid)
-------
0.132t/2.141t, Isp=292.6s
PAM-DII (Shuttle,Delta;solid)
-------
0.25t/3.49t, Isp=281.7sec.
TRANSTAGE: (Titan;Aerozine 50/N2O4)
---------
3.13t/13.51t, Isp=309.1sec
TRANSFER ORBIT STAGE (Titan,Shuttle;solid)
--------------------
1.09t/10.8t Isp=294sec.
INERTIAL UPPER STAGE (Titan,Shuttle;solid)
--------------------
1.255t/10.965t (200kN, Isp=292.9s)
1.15t/3.9t (81.2kN, Isp=300.9s)
SPACE SHUTTLE:
-------------
0x2:Thio SRB (x2) Solid 23580kN (2x(83t/586t)),Isp=262s)
1:Rdyne SSME (x3) LOX/LH2 6273kN (Ext.Tank=33.5/743.25t,Isp=458s)
Aero OMS (x2) MMH/N2O4 53kN (Orbiter dry w.=78-82t,Isp=313s)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2040.85t (29.478t to LEO;)
MISCELLANEOUS DATA:
Solid Rocket Boosters:120s burn time
Orbiter Engines:
OMS: 2x26.5kN, w=3.07km/s
Fuel:2 x 2.043t (=2 x 5.2m3)MMH, 2 x 3.372t (=2 x 4.7m3) N2O4
SSME: 3 x 2091kN (vacuum),w=4.5km/s
mass=3 X 3.175t
SATURN IB/APOLLO:
----------------
1:Rdyne H-1 (x8) LOX/RP-1 7296kN (42t/428t[in 1964],Isp=263-283s)
2:Rdyne J-2 LOX/LH2 1001kN (13.4/117.8,Isp=426s)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
587.3t (18.140t to LEO;)
MISCELLANEOUS INFORMATION:
J2:w=4.18km/s,1001kN thrust (vacuum), weight=1.58t
H-1 (x8), w=2.58-2.78km/s (sea level/vacuum), 910kN (sea level), mass=807-916kg
SATURN V/APOLLO:
---------------
1:Rdyne F-1 (x5) LOX/RP-1 34034kN (130.3t/2283.3t,Isp=265-304s)
2:Rdyne J-2 (x5) LOX/LH2 5116kN (35.4t/488.1t,Isp=425s)
3:Rdyne J-2 LOX/LH2 1059kN (13.4t/117.8,Isp=426s)
--------------------------------------------------------------------
2,912.925t (Saturn V+Apollo 17). 125t to 185.2km,28.5 deg, 104.3t to
370.4km,28.5 deg orbit
MISCELLANEOUS DATA:
J2:1024kN thrust (vacuum), weight=1.724t
(J2-S upgrade:Isp=436s)
F1:Thrust=7780kN (vacuum)/6770kN (sea level), mass flow=2700kg/s, weight=8.6t
(F-1A upgrade:Isp=271-304s, thrust=8010-8990kN)
SATURN V/SKYLAB
---------------
2,821.770t (S-IC+S-II+Skylab)
E U R O P E:
-----------
Ariane 44L:
----------
0x4:SEP Viking5 (x4) UH25/N2O4 4x667-737kN (4x(4.5/43.5t),Isp=248-278s)
1:SEP Viking5 (x4) UH25/N2O4 4x677-759kN (18t/255t,Isp=248-279s?)
2:SEP Viking 4 UH25/N2O4 785kN (3.3/38.5,Isp=293.5s)
3:SEP HM-7 LOX/LH2 62.7kN (1.3/12.1t,Isp=444.2s?)
---------------------------------------------------------------------
471t (4.2t to geostationary transer orbit, 9.6t to LEO)
Stage 0 : 2m15sec. burn)
Stage 1 : 3m25sec. burn)
Stage 2 : 2m04sec. burn)
Stage 3 :12m05sec. burn)
Ariane 5: (8.2t to GSO, 18t to LEO)
--------
0x2: Solid (35/230t)x2, Isp=273s
1: LOX/LH2 800kN (15/155t),Isp=430 (800kN)
2: UDMH/N2O4 (0.93/7.2t), Isp=316s
--------------------------------------------------------------------
(Scheduled to make first flight in 1996, 1st stage engine burn time:500s.
18t to LEO, 4.5t to GSO)
J A P A N:
---------
H-II:
----
0x2: HTPB (solid) 2x1.56mN (2x(11.3/70.5t) Isp=273s[v])
1: LE-7 LOX/LH2 843-1080kN (11.8t/98.1t, Isp=445s[v])
2: LE-5A LOX/LH2 121.6kN (3t/19.7t, Isp=452s)
---------------------------------------------------------------------
264t (10.5t to 30deg 185km orbit; 6.6t to polar orbit, 4t to GTO, 2.2t to GSO)
Stage 0: 94s burn
Stage 1: 348s burn
Stage 2: 590s burn
R U S S I A:
-----------
PROTON:
------
1: RD-253 (x6) UDMH/N2O4 14148kN (45.4/455.6t Isp=285-316s)
2: RD-253 (x2) UDMH/N2O4 2709kN (15.5/165.5t Isp=316s )
3: RD-253 UDMH/N2O4 418kN (5.6/55.6t Isp=316s )
4: Block-D LOX/Kerosene 84kN (2.65/17.65t Isp=352s )
---
(Salyut, Mir etc. [3 stage version], Zond 4-8, Mars 2-7, Luna 15-24,
Venera 9-17, Phobos 1-2 etc. [4 stage version]
21t to LEO [3 stage version], 5.8t to Moon, 5.3t to Venus, 4.6t to
Mars [4 stage version])
A-2-e/Vostok:
------------
0x4: LOX/Kerosene 4002kN ( (4.2t/46.5t)x4, Isp=316s)
1: LOX/Kerosene 942kN (8.4t/104.5t,Isp=316s)
2: LOX/Kerosene 55kN (Vostok:1.45t/6.45t)
----------------------------------------------------------------
287t(Vostok), 309t(Voskhod), 312.5t(Soyuz)
Soyuz third stage=294kN thrust. Payloads: Sputnik (no 2nd stage), Vostok,
Voskhod, Soyuz; Luna 1-14, Zond 1-3, Venera 1-8, Mars 1 etc.
ENERGIA:
-------
0x4: RD-170 (x4) LOX/Kerosene each 7260-7907kN (4x(30/350t),isp=309-337s)
1 : RD-0120 (x4) LOX/LH2 5808-7848kN (85/905t. Isp=354-452s)
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed upper stages:Buran shuttle, Block-D, EUS (LOX/LH2, 16.5x5.7m)
(88t to LEO using 4 strap-on boosters. 105t using 6 strap-ons??)
ENERGIA-M:two strap-ons, one RD-0120 only. 30t to LEO
N-1
---
1: 30 engines, 46000kN ( 1281t LOX,422t kerosene?,120s burn)
2: 8 engines, 14000kN ( 306t LOX,144t kerosene?)
3: 4 engines, 1609kN (116.5t LOX,44t kerosene?)
-----------------------------------------------
(2788t+98t payload. Manned Moon rocket. Four launch failures from 1969 to 1972.)
-----------------------------------------------
ROCKET FUEL DATA:
Nitric Oxy- Fluo- Hydro- Hydra- Hydrogen Methane
Acid gen rine gen zine Peroxide
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
HNO3 N2O4 O2 F2 H2 N2H4 UMDH H2O2 Kerosene CH4
Mol.wt. 63 92 32 38 2 32 60 34 (=RP-1) 16
Density 1.54 1.434 1.14 1.505 0.071 1.004 0.785 1.412 0.806 0.448
BoilingP 84.1 21.15-183 -188 -253 113.5 63.1
FreezingP -41.6 -11.2 -218.8-219.5-258.8 +1.53 -57.2
Propellant Ratio Density Isp (vac.)
LH2+LOX (1:6) 0.354 460
RP-1+LOX (1:5) 1.07 352
UDMH+N2O4 (1:3) 1.17 316
RP-1+H2O2 (1:7) 1.34 327
CH4+LOX (1:3) 0.82 380
MANNED SPACECRAFT DATA:
----------------------
VOSTOK:
------
Crew capsule..............2.4t
Instrument Unit+fairing...2.35t
VOSKHOD:
-------
Voskhod 1.................5.32t
Voskhod 2.................5.695t
SOYUZ:
----- Orbital Module............1.1t
Crew capsule..............3.05t
Instrument Module.........2.7t (incl. 0.65t fuel;3100N engine)
(Unmanned Progress cargo craft: 7.1t including 1.3t supplies, 1t fuel)
X-15:
----
5.16t/14.19t; LOX/Ammonia fuel (222.5-257.5kN thrust,Isp=276s (vac.))
(Hypersonic rocket plane: 199 suborbital flights)
GEMINI:
------
Crew capsule+Service Module..3.8t (incl. 0.225t fuel,
Isp=290s, 445N thrust)
APOLLO CSM:
----------
Command Module:5.937t (Apollo 17)
Service Module:
gross weight=24.528t (Apollo 17)
(18t UDMH/N2O4 fuel?),Isp=290s?, 91,2kN thrust
Escape tower:3.8t
APOLLO LUNAR MODULE: (Apollo 11: 15.040t)
-------------------
Descent stage: 10.8t (incl.9t Aerozine 50/N2O4 fuel, 50kN thrust max.)
Ascent stage: 4.6t (incl. 2.3t Aerozine 50/N2O4 fuel, 18kN thrust max.)
|
546.13 | At last, numbers and more numbers | MAYDAY::ANDRADE | The sentinel (.)(.) | Wed May 25 1994 06:21 | 8 |
| Re.12 "ELV Specifications"
This is great, I have been looking for some of those numbers for
a long time...
KLAES thanks for reposting it here.
Gil
|
546.14 | | STAR::HUGHES | Samurai Couch Potato | Fri May 27 1994 12:28 | 8 |
| If you really want the numbers for current LVs, you should get a
copy of the AIAA's book on Space Transportation Systems.
Some of the numbers in the previous note don't specify the model or
flight number for the LV (e.g. for the Atlas Centaur) which becomes
important if you are really looking for detail.
gary
|