- Hopper (spacecraft)
Hopper is a proposed
European Space Agency orbital craft advanced concept. The advanced studies are supported by theEADS Phoenix flight test project.Hopper is advertised to be more economical than today's space vehicles and even reliable for manned space operations. The European Space Agency and EADS hope to complete development of Hopper between
2015 and date=July 2008Phoenix was the prototype of Hopper, a proposed unmanned European reusable launch vehicle. (Phoenix was, besides
Penelope andAriane , originally suggested for the name of Ariane rocket family). The project appears to have been canceled like the proposed European shuttle, "Hermes".Phoenix is part of the German national program
ASTRA , a €40 million project founded by the German Federal Government,EADS Astrium Space Transportation and the State of Bremen with one third each. Both EADS and the State of Bremen have already invested another €8.2 million respective €4.3 million out of their own funds. Another contribution of €16 million comes from partner companies such as the Bremen-basedOHB-System , DLR and the Federal Ministry for Education and Research.EADS is responsible for the project management and for the entire software equipment of the system. Other partner companies are also involved in the development.The Phoenix RLV prototype is 6.9 meters long (23 ft), has a weight of 1,200 kilograms (2,640 lb), and a wingspan of 3.9 meters (13 ft). The prototype, at one sixth the size of the planned vehicle, is still in the alpha stage of development at Bremen labs of EADS.
On Saturday
8 May 2004 , the prototype was dropped from 2.4 kilometers (8,000 ft) by a helicopter and landed precisely and without incident after aGPS -guided 90 second glide. The test was conducted at theNorth European Aerospace Test range in Kiruna, 1,240 km (770 miles) north ofStockholm ,Sweden . Future tests will involve drops from higher altitude, possibly from a balloon.The primary aim of the test was to assess the
glider potential of the craft. The final version of the vehicle must be able to glide from an altitude of 129 kilometers (80 miles).External links
* [http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,1196314,00.html European Space Shuttle Glides To Success]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.