- Minotaur I
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Minotaur I
Minotaur I with NFIRE at MARSFunction Small expendable launch system Manufacturer Orbital Sciences Country of origin United States Size Height 19.21 metres (63.0 ft) Diameter 1.67 metres (5 ft 6 in) Mass 36,200 kilograms (80,000 lb) Stages 4 or 5 Capacity Payload to
LEO580 kilograms (1,300 lb) Payload to
SSO331 kilograms (730 lb) Launch history Status Active Launch sites Vandenberg SLC-8
MARS LP-0BTotal launches 10 Successes 10 Maiden flight 27 January 2000 First Stage - M55A1 Engines 1 Solid Thrust 935 kilonewtons (210,000 lbf) Fuel Solid Second Stage - SR19 Engines 1 Solid Thrust 268 kilonewtons (60,000 lbf) Fuel Solid Third Stage - Orion 50XL Engines 1 Solid Thrust 118.2 kilonewtons (26,600 lbf) Burn time 74 seconds Fuel Solid Fourth Stage - Orion 38 Engines 1 Solid Thrust 34.8 kilonewtons (7,800 lbf) Burn time 68 seconds Fuel Solid The Minotaur I, or just Minotaur is an American expendable launch system derived from the Minuteman II missile. It is used to launch small satellites for the US Government, and is a member of the Minotaur family of rockets produced by Orbital Sciences Corporation.
Minotaur I rockets consist of the M55A1 first stage and SR19 second stage of a decommissioned Minuteman missile. The Orion 50XL and Orion 38, from the Pegasus rocket, are used as third and fourth stages. A HAPS upper stage can also be flown if greater precision is needed, or the rocket needs to be able to manoeuvre to deploy multiple payloads. It can place up to 580 kilograms (1,300 lb) of payload into a 185-kilometre (115 mi) low Earth orbit at 28.5 degrees of inclination.
There have been ten launches of the Minotaur I, all successful. Initially Minotaur I launches were conducted from Space Launch Complex 8 at the Vandenberg Air Force Base. Starting with the launch of TacSat-2 in December 2006, launches have also been conducted from Pad 0B at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport on Wallops Island.
Launch history
Date (UTC) Rocket Flight Payload Launch pad Trajectory Result January 27, 2000 03:03:06 Minotaur I 1 JAWSat (P98-1) (FalconSat1 / ASUSat1 / OCSE / OPAL) Vandenberg SLC-8 LEO Success July 19, 2000 20:09:00 Minotaur I 2 MightySat II.1 (Sindri, P99-1) / MEMS 2A / MEMS 2B Vandenberg SLC-8 LEO Success April 11, 2005 13:35:00 Minotaur I 3 XSS-11 Vandenberg SLC-8 LEO Success September 23, 2005 02:24:00 Minotaur I 4 Streak (STP-R1) Vandenberg SLC-8 LEO Success April 15, 2006 01:40:00 Minotaur I 5 COSMIC (FORMOSAT-3) Vandenberg SLC-8 LEO Success December 16, 2006 12:00 Minotaur I 6 TacSat-2 / GeneSat-1 MARS LP-0B LEO Success April 24, 2007 06:48 Minotaur I 7 NFIRE MARS LP-0B LEO Success May 19, 2009 19:55 Minotaur I 8 TacSat-3 MARS LP-0B LEO Success February 6, 2011 12:26 Minotaur I 9 NROL-66 Vandenberg SLC-8 LEO Success June 30th, 2011 03:09 Minotaur I 10 ORS-1 MARS LP-0B LEO Success References
- "Fact Sheet". Minotaur I. Orbital Sciences Corporation. http://www.orbital.com/NewsInfo/Publications/Minotaur_I_Fact.pdf. Retrieved 2009-04-28.
- "Minotaur Mission History". Minotaur I. Orbital Sciences Corporation. http://www.orbital.com/SpaceLaunch/Minotaur/I/minotaur_history.shtml. Retrieved 2009-04-28.
- "Users Guide". Minotaur I. Orbital Sciences Corporation. http://www.orbital.com/NewsInfo/Publications/Minotaur_Guide.pdf. Retrieved 2009-04-28.
- Wade, Mark. "Minotaur". Encyclopedia Astronautica. http://www.astronautix.com/lvs/minotaur.htm. Retrieved 2009-04-28.
- Krebs, Gunter. "Minotaur-1 (OSP-SLV)". Gunter's Space Page. http://space.skyrocket.de/doc_lau/minotaur-1.htm. Retrieved 2009-04-28.
- Krebs, Gunter. "Minotaur-1 (OSP-SLV)". Gunter's Space Page. http://space.skyrocket.de/doc_lau_det/minotaur-1.htm. Retrieved 2009-04-28.
- Krebs, Gunter. "Minotaur-1 HAPS (OSP-SLV)". Gunter's Space Page. http://space.skyrocket.de/doc_lau_det/minotaur-1_haps.htm. Retrieved 2009-04-28.
Expendable launch systems Current Ariane 5 · Atlas V · Delta (II · IV) · Dnepr-1 · GSLV · H-IIA · H-IIB · Kaituozhe-1 · Kosmos-3M · Long March (1D · 2C · 2D · 2F · 3A · 3B · 3C · 4B · 4C) · Minotaur (I · IV) · Naro-1 · Paektusan · Pegasus · Proton (K · M) · PSLV · Rokot · Safir · Shavit · Shtil' · Start-1 · Strela · Soyuz (U · FG · 2) · Taurus · Unha · VLS-1 · Volna · Zenit (2 · 2M · 3SL · 3SLB)
Planned Angara · Athena (Ic · IIc) · GSLV III · Haas · Long March (5 · 6 · 7) · Minotaur V · RPS-420 · Rus-M · Soyuz-1 · Simorgh · TSLV · Taurus II · Tsyklon-4 · Vega · Zenit-3F
Previous Ariane (1 · 2 · 3 · 4) · ASLV · Athena (I · II) · Atlas (B · D · E/F · G · H · I · II · III · LV-3B · SLV-3 · Able · Agena · Centaur) · Black Arrow · Caleb · Conestoga · Delta (A · B · C · D · E · G · J · L · M · N · 0100 · 1000 · 2000 · 3000 · 4000 · 5000 · III) · Diamant · Energia · Europa · Falcon 1* · Feng Bao 1 · H-I · H-II · J-I · Juno I · Juno II · Kosmos (1 · 2I · 3) · Lambda (4S) · Long March (1 · 2A · 2E · 3 · 4A) · Mu (4S · 3C · 3H · 3S · 3SII · V) · N1 · N-I · N-II · Pilot · R-7 (Luna · Molniya (M) · Polyot · Soyuz (L · M · U2) · Soyuz/Vostok · Sputnik · Voskhod · Vostok (L · K · 2 · 2M)) · Saturn (I · IB · V · INT-21) · Scout · SLV · Sparta · Thor (Able · Ablestar · Agena · Burner · Delta · DSV-2U) · Thorad-Agena · Titan (II GLV · IIIA · IIIB · IIIC · IIID · IIIE · 34D · 23G · CT-3 · IV) · Tsyklon (2 · 3) · Vanguard
* - Falcon 1 designed for partial reuse, however recovery failed on the first three flights and remaining vehicles were flown expendably United States orbital launch systems Active In development Retired Ares I · Ares V · Athena (I · II) · Atlas (B · D · E/F · G · H · I · II · III · LV-3B · SLV-3 · Able · Agena · Centaur) · Caleb · Conestoga · Delta (A · B · C · D · E · G · J · L · M · N · 0100 · 1000 · 2000 · 3000 · 4000 · 5000 · III) · H-I* · Juno I · Juno II · N-I* · N-II* · Pilot · Saturn (I · IB · V · INT-21) · Scout · Shuttle · Sparta · Thor (Able · Ablestar · Agena · Burner · Delta · DSV-2U) · Thorad-Agena · Titan (II GLV · IIIA · IIIB · IIIC · IIID · IIIE · 34D · 23G · CT-3 · IV) · Vanguard* - Japanese projects using US rockets or stages Categories:- Rocketry stubs
- Minotaur rockets
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