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Drop test proves technologies for reusable microlauncher by Staff Writers Madrid (ESA) Apr 15, 2019
Spain's PLD Space, supported by ESA, has demonstrated the technologies for a reusable first stage of their orbital microlauncher, Miura 5. Miura 5 (formerly Arion 2) is aimed to provide dedicated launches for small satellites of up to 300 kg to low Earth orbit, in 2021. It weighs 14 t at liftoff, and is powered by liquid oxygen-kerosene engines. This drop test was carried out yesterday from El Arenosillo Experimentation Center in Spain. A Chinook CH-47 helicopter lifted the 15 m long 1.4 m diameter Miura 5 demonstration first stage to an altitude of 5 km then dropped it over a controlled area of the Atlantic Ocean, 6 km off the coast of Huelva in southern Spain. During the descent, electronic systems inside the demonstrator controlled a carefully timed release of three parachutes to slow it down until its splashdown at a speed of about 10 m/s. A team of divers recovered the demonstrator and hoisted it onto a tugboat, which returned to the port of Mazagon. The demonstrator looks to be in good shape and will now be transported to PLD Space, in Elche, for inspection and further analysis. The same parachute system will also be used on their Miura 1 suborbital microlauncher, on track for a first launch this year. In a next step, PLD Space intends to develop a propulsive landing system in addition to the parachutes. These technologies are being developed with support from ESA's Future Launchers Preparatory Programme.
First 2019 Proton-M Rocket Launch From Baikonur Slated for May Baikonur, Kazakhstan (SPX) Apr 03, 2019 The first 2019 launch of the Russian-built Proton-M carrier rocket with the Blagovest telecommunications satellite from the Baikonur Cosmodrome will take place on 23 May, a source in the rocket and space industry told Sputnik. Last week, another source told Sputnik that the first 2019 launch of the Proton-M carrier rocket from Baikonur had been postponed from May 17 to 24-25 May. "The launch of the Proton-M carrier rocket with the Briz-M upper stage and the Blagovest satellite from the Baiko ... read more
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