- Aerobee
The Aerobee rocket was a small (8 m) unguided suborbital
sounding rocket used for high atmospheric andcosmic radiation research in theUnited States in the 1950s.It was built by
Aerojet General . The company began work in 1946 and test fired the first complete Aerobee from theWhite Sands Proving Grounds inNew Mexico on1947-11-24 , it reached an altitude of mi to km | 34.7. [cite web | url = http://www.wsmr.army.mil/pao/FactSheets/chrono.htm | title = Area and Missile Range Chronology | publisher = WSMR]The rocket was two stage with a solid-fuel boost and a
nitric acid /aniline sustainer. The rockets could reach around 230 km (a later variant exceeded 400 km), instrumentation usually provided constant telemetry and was recovered by parachute. For accurate pointing special gimbal mounts were developed.Aerobees were launched from 53 m tall launch towers to provide the necessary stability until the rockets gained enough speed for their fins to be effective in controlling attitude. Launch towers were built at
White Sands Missile Range ,Fort Churchill ,Wallops Island , and aboard the research vessel USS "Norton Sound". The Aerobee could take a 68 kg payload to an altitude of 130 km.The first instrument-carrying Aerobee was the A-5 which was launched on March 5, 1948 from White Sands, carrying instruments for cosmic radiation research it reached an altitude of 117.5 km. The last Aerobee flight was in 1958, around 165 (including variants) had been successfully fired. Variants of the Aerobee were launched in 1968 and 1969 for research relating to the
Apollo program . The Aerojet engineers also developed the Aerobee-Hi (first launched in 1955).A total of 1,037 Aerobees (including variants) were launched, the last on
January 17 ,1985 .Technical data
Aerobee
*Payload: 68 kg
*Maximum flight altitude: 130 km
*Liftoff Thrust: 18 kN
*Total Mass: 727 kg
*Core Diameter: 0.38 m
*Total Length: 7.80 mAerobee 75
*Maximum flight altitude: 80 km
*Liftoff Thrust: 7.00 kN
*Total Mass: 400 kg
*Total Length: 6.00 mAerobee 150
*Payload: 68 kg
*Maximum flight altitude: 270 km
*Liftoff Thrust: 18 kN
*Total Mass: 930 kg
*Core Diameter: 0.38 m
*Total Length: 9.30 mAerobee 170
*Maximum flight altitude: 200 km
*Liftoff Thrust: 225 kN
*Total Mass: 1,270 kg
*Core Diameter: 0.42 m
*Total Length: 12.60 mAerobee 170A
*Maximum flight altitude: 200 km
*Liftoff Thrust: 217 kN
*Total Mass: 1,270 kg
*Core Diameter: 0.42 m
*Total Length: 12.40 mAerobee 170B
*Maximum flight altitude: 200 km
*Liftoff Thrust: 225 kN
*Total Mass: 1,270 kg
*Core Diameter: 0.42 m
*Total Length: 12.40 mAerobee 200
*Maximum flight altitude: 250 km
*Liftoff Thrust: 225 kN
*Total Mass: 1,600 kg
*Core Diameter: 0.42 m
*Total Length: 12.60 mAerobee 300
*Payload: 45 kg
*Maximum flight altitude: 300 km
*Liftoff Thrust: 18 kN
*Total Mass: 983 kg
*Core Diameter: 0.38 m
*Total Length: 9.90 mAerobee 350
*Payload: 227 kg
*Maximum flight altitude: 450 km
*Liftoff Thrust: 217 kN
*Total Mass: 3,839 kg
*Core Diameter: 0.56 m
*Total Length: 15.90 m
*Span: 2.30 mIn Fiction
An unspecified man-rated, advanced Aerobee rocket is used to lift the first man into space in the 1960 science-fiction novel "Men into Space" by Murray Leinster. The novel was the basis for the USA CBS-TV series "Men into Space".
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