S.P.Korolev RSC Energia receives numerous questions
and requests from agencies, companies and individuals from
abroad to tell them about the Corporation's experience in
the development of rocket and space systems for various
purposes, about work performed by our organization together
with other companies and organizations of this country,
and about a comparative assessment of the costs of new systems
development with respect to other similar projects.
Materials answering these questions are presented in the
appropriate sections of this Corporation's web-site. In
order to facilitate the search and comprehension of these
materials, we provide below some general information about
our company's activities in the development of launcher
facilities of various classes:
Our
company (formerly known as Special Design Bureau 1,
Central Design Bureau fro Experimental Machine-building,
NPO Energia, now known as S.P.Korolev RSC Energia) has a
wealth of experience in launcher activities.
Hardly any other company in Russia, and, maybe, in the whole
world, has the same long history and breadth of experience
in all the areas of rocket and space technology.
Our team was formed by the first chief designer of the rocket
and space systems, the farther of the practical space science,
academician Sergei Pavlovich Korolev who was assigned the
task of developing the first long-range ballistic missiles
in our country. It was under his leadership, with participation
of other organizations and companies of our country were
headed by academicians M.V.Keldysh, I.V.Kurchatov, chief
designers of systems and units academicians V.P.Gloshko,
M.S.Ryazansky, V.I.Kuznetsov, N.A.Pilyugin, V.P.Barmin and
others, that the rocket systems R-1,
R-2, R-5,
R-5M,
R-11
(11M, 11FM),
R-7
(7A), R-9
(9A) were developed in 1946-1963. The first few of these
rockets used liquid oxygen and alcohol as propellants. Then,
R-11 rocket provided experience in working with nitric acid
and kerosene. After that, the liquid propulsion rockets,
starting with the legendary R-7, were developed using the
following propellant components: liquid oxygen, kerosene,
liquid hydrogen. In 1960s our company also developed strategic
missile systems based on solid-propellant intercontinental
two-stage missiles (RT-1, RT-2).
In 1960s the company started developing a super-heavy launch
vehicle (LV) N1
for the manned lunar program. The work under this program
which continued till 1974, took our country's rocket science
to an entirely new level of knowledge and technologies.
A special place among all the projects carried out by our
company is occupied by the development of the one-of-a-kind
super-heavy LV Energia
with load-carrying capacity of up to 100 tons, which is
still unparalleled in world in some of its engineering solutions.
It was the key project in a series of standardized environmentally-friendly
domestic LVs which was to provide low-Earth orbit insertion
of payloads with a mass of 12-15 tons (medium-class LV Zenit)
to 30-60 tons (heavy LV Groza) and then up to 200 tons (super-heavy
LV Vulkan). The work on Energia LV covers the period of
time from late 1970s to early 1990s when Perestroika policies
and the subsequent break-up the USSR led to the project
termination. But the experience of working on this launch
vehicle which was a part of our country's reusable space
system Energia-Buran was so vast, successful and rich, that
it was used to the fullest degree in those projects that
we proposed afterwards and are still proposing today in
the present-day designs of space launchers.
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DM-type Block Manufacturing
Production Base |
Even in the years that were the most difficult period for
Russia (1991-2000), RSC Energia pioneered a one-of-a-kind
sea-based space launcher system Sea
Launch, based on the designs, technologies and production
facilities developed in the course of Energia-Buran project.
The rocket segment of this system includes LV Zenit-2S,
a derivative of Zenit,which has the same modular part as
the LV Energia first stage strap-on boosters, and the
upper stage DM-SL, one of ten derivatives of a highly
reliable Block DM upper stage that has been in operation
for several decades under various programs and uses liquid
oxygen and kerosene propellants.
In parallel with this,taking into account the state of economy
and the state of the market, world market included, in mid-1990s
our company developed a number of designs for light launch
vehicles (LV Kvant,
Kvant-1),
and then, taking into account the demands of the market,
proposed medium LV designs as possible upgrade options for
the currently operated Soyuz-type
LVs derived from the original R-7 rocket design. These are
launch vehicle projects Yamal, Onega, and Aurora.
The work on the rocket and space system based on medium-class
LV Aurora was performed by the Corporation using the usual
subcontractors for Soyuz LV under a contract with the Asia-Pacific
Space Center of Australia, but was suspended in 2002 because
the customer had problems with the funding. However, technical
capabilities found in the course of the work under the Aurora
project, and an inventory of the already built components
for such a rocket , as well as the design documentation,
the established network of subcontractors and the developed
technologies make it feasible to develop on this basis a
light-class LV system with the payload capacity of up to
1.5-2 tons to low Earth orbit.
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SR&PRSC TsSKB-Progress
PRODUCTION BASE |
SR&PRSC TsSKB-Progress
Assembling-and-Testing Building |
It is proposed that this system, which was given designation
Aurora-L.SK, just as the launch vehicle of the same designation,
should be developed within three years, using the traditional
network of subcontractors proven over decades in many projects,
which includes such world-renowned Russian rocket developers
as TsSKB-Progress, V.P.Glushko NPO Energomash, N.A.Pilyugin
NPTs AP, V.P.Barmin KBOM, V.I.Kuznetsov SNTK, RNII KP and
others.
S.P. Korolev RSC Energia being an heir of the best traditions
of S.P. Korolev's school and the only Russian organization
having a semicentenary experience in developing LVs that
operate every known propellant components, is primarily
focused on the development of ecologically safe LVs with
low-boiling propellant components.
At present, the organizations (V.N. Chelomei, M.K. Yangel,
V.P. Makeev), which were engaged in a different area of
developing rockets, i.e. LVs with high-boiling propellant
components, also propose to develop ecologically safe LVs
using low-boiling propellant components.
In launch vehicle Aurora-L.SK RSC Energia uses off-the-shelf
flight proven components: engine NK-33 in the first stage
and upper stage DM-SL as its second stage. This stage carries
a highly reliable system for controlling the whole of the
rocket. Engineering solutions have already been proven and
guarantee a high reliability of the system as a whole, while
requiring a minimal development cost, which is twice as
low compared with the options proposed by other developers
of similar systems.
Principal
characteristics |
Launching Mass
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135 t
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Payload mass
- in elliptic orbitЕ (мО/мЮ=300/1500 km, i=80°)
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1.5 t
|
Launch Vehicle Engine Thrust
- at first stage, Sea-level
- main engine (NK-33)
- vernier engine (RD0110R)
- at second stage (11D58M), vacuum
|
154.05 tf
24.35 tf
8.0 tf
|
Propellant Capacity Reserve
- at first stage
- at second stage
|
108.0 t
11.3 t
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ILV Overall Dimensions
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31.4 m
3.7 m
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