Vega flight VV04

Vega flight VV04 is the space launch of the IXV experimental re-entry vehicle by the 4th Vega rocket.

Vega flight VV04
Artwork featured on visitors' brochures
Vega launch
Launch11 February 2015 (2015-02-11), 13:40:00 UTC
OperatorArianespace
PadKourou ELV
PayloadIntermediate eXperimental Vehicle
OutcomeSuccess
Vega launches

Payload

The flight was a single-payload mission that put the IXV prototype spaceplane into sub-orbital spaceflight. The total payload mass was approximately 1,932 kilograms (4,259 lb), including the spacecraft and its adapter.

IXV

The Intermediate eXperimental Vehicle (abbreviated IXV) was 5.058 metres (16.59 ft) long, 1.540 metres (5 ft 0.6 in) high, and 2.2369 metres (7 ft 4.07 in) wide.[1] It had a lift-off mass of approximately 1,845 kilograms (4,068 lb), and was the only payload of the flight.

IXV was designed and manufactured by a consortium led by Thales Alenia Space.

Mission description

Launch time and location

The launch was initially foreseen for 1 November 2014 but was postponed to allow further analyses of the flight path. The 4th successful Vega flight finally took place on 11 February 2015 at 13:40:00 UTC (10:00:00 local time) from the ELV launch pad at the Guiana Space Centre in Kourou, French Guiana.

Orbit

The sub-orbital flight was planned to last about 100 minutes from lift-off until splashdown in the Pacific Ocean, near coordinate 3.3°N 123.16°W / 3.3; -123.16.[1]

Statistics

The mission was the 4th launch of the Vega launcher (the 1st out of 3 in 2015), and the 261st Arianespace mission (the 1st in 2015).

References

  1. Marco, Victor; Contreras, Rafael; Sanchez, Raul; Rodriguez, Guillermo; Serrano, Daniel; Kerr, Murray; Fernandez, Vicente; Haya-Ramos, Rodrigo; Peñin, Luis F.; Ospina, Jose A.; De Zaiacomo, Gabriale; Bejar-Romero, Juan Antonio; Yague, Ricardo; Zaccagnino, Elio; Preaud, Jean-Philippe (July 2016). "The IXV guidance, navigation and control subsystem: Development, verification and performances". Acta Astronautica. 124: 53–66. doi:10.1016/j.actaastro.2016.04.010.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.