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Sunday, October 15, 2023

Billionaire space race

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
Jeff Bezos (top), Richard Branson (middle) and Elon Musk (bottom), widely seen as the main competitors of the billionaire space race

The billionaire space race is the rivalry among entrepreneurs who have entered the space industry from other industries - particularly computing. This private spaceflight race involves sending privately developed rockets and vehicles to various destinations in space, often in response to government programs or to develop the space tourism sector.

Today, the billionaire space race is primarily between three billionaires and their respective firms:

Prior to his death in 2018, Paul Allen was also a major player in the billionaire space race through the aerospace division of his firm Vulcan and his financing of programs such as Scaled Composites Tier One. Allen sought to reduce the cost of launching payloads into orbit.

Background

The groundwork for the billionaire space race and private spaceflight was arguably laid by Peter Diamandis, an American entrepreneur. In the 1980s, he founded an American national student space society, the Students for the Exploration and Development of Space (SEDS). Later, Jeff Bezos became a chapter president of SEDS. In the 1990s, Diamandis, disappointed with the state of space development, decided to spur it on and spark the suborbital space tourism market, by initiating a prize, the X Prize. This led to Paul Allen becoming involved in the competition, creating the Scaled Composites Tier One platform of SpaceShipOne and White Knight One which won the Ansari X-Prize in 2004. The technology of the winning entrant was then licensed by Richard Branson's Virgin Group as a basis to found Virgin Galactic. The base techniques of Tier One also form the basis for Stratolaunch Systems (formerly of Vulcan Aerospace). Elon Musk's SpaceX was established in 2002, last among the three main rivals. Elon Musk has expressed excitement for a new space race.

Government programs have also fuelled the billionaire space race. NASA programs such as the Commercial Crew Program (created in 2010, with grants mostly won by SpaceX and partially by Blue Origin) and the Artemis HLS program (awarded to SpaceX in 2021 and also to Blue Origin in 2023) have pushed the billionaires to compete against each other to be selected for those multi-billion dollar procurement programs. The competition has also resulted in court battles such as Blue Origin v. United States & SpaceX. Those government programs have provided critical funding for the new private space industry and its development.

Major milestones

Rivalries

SpaceX vs. Blue Origin

SpaceX and Blue Origin have had a long history of conflict. Blue Origin and SpaceX have had dueling press releases that compete with each other's announcements and events.

SpaceX and Blue Origin battled for the right to lease LC-39A, the rocket launch platform that was used to launch the Apollo Moon missions. SpaceX won the lease in 2013, but Blue Origin filed suit in court against that. It is currently in the hands of SpaceX, while Blue Origin rented SLC-36 instead.

SpaceX filed suit against Blue Origin to invalidate their patent on landing rockets aboard ships at sea. They won their court fight in 2014. SpaceX had been attempting to land rockets at sea since 2014, finally succeeding in 2016, before Blue Origin ever even built a sea-going platform to land rockets onto.

SpaceX and Blue Origin got into a Twitter battle about the meaning of a used rocket, landed rocket, spacerocket, at the end of 2015, when New Shepard successfully landed, after a suborbital jaunt into space. SpaceX had previously launched and landed its Grasshopper rocket multiple times without reaching space. Then SpaceX landed a Falcon 9 first stage, which had been used to launch a satellite into orbit, prompting more Twitter battles at the start of 2016, such as Bezos tweeting "welcome to the club".

In late 2016, Blue Origin announced the New Glenn, directly competing against SpaceX's Falcon Heavy, with a larger rocket but lower payload.

At the 2016 International Astronautical Congress in Guadalajara, Mexico, Blue Origin President Rob Meyerson elaborated on the Bezos vision previously outlined in the New Glenn announcement. The Blue Origin New Armstrong would be similar in function to the SpaceX Interplanetary Transport System that Elon Musk unveiled at the same conference.

In April 2021, SpaceX beat Blue Origin to a 2.9 billion dollar contract to build the lunar lander for NASA's Artemis program. In August 2021, Blue Origin subsequently began a legal case against NASA and SpaceX in the Court of Federal Claims, which was dismissed in November of the same year. About two years later in May 2023 NASA awarded Blue Origin a $3.4 billion contract to develop a competing moon lander, noting that "adding another human landing system partner to NASA’s Artemis program will increase competition, reduce costs to taxpayers, support a regular cadence of lunar landings, further invest in the lunar economy, and help NASA achieve its goals on and around the Moon in preparation for future astronaut missions to Mars."

Blue Origin vs. Virgin Galactic

Blue Origin and Virgin Galactic are in the same market, suborbital space tourism, with the space capsule New Shepard and the spaceplane SpaceShipTwo, respectively. The two systems made their first flights with multiple passengers within 10 days: SpaceShipTwo flew on July 11, 2021 and New Shepard followed on July 20, both carrying their billionaire founders and a few other passengers. As of July 2023, SpaceShipTwo has made three tourism flights with two pilots and four passengers each while New Shepard has made six flights with six passengers each.

Former rivalries

Stratolaunch vs. Virgin Orbit

The Stratolaunch rivalries are no longer part of the billionaire space race, after 2019, having been suspended at the time of Paul Allen's death. The Stratolaunch company has since continued operations under new ownership, but does not focus on orbital space launches anymore.

Vulcan Aerospace subsidiary Stratolaunch Systems planned to air-launch satellite launcher rockets, the same profile as planned by Virgin Orbit for its LauncherOne operations. While LauncherOne was developed and launch aircraft procured (once White Knight Two, now 747 Cosmic Girl), the Scaled Composites "Roc" Model 351 is still being developed (as of 2022) and the rocket to mate to it (the company has refocused away from orbital spaceflight) has yet to be selected. After the death of Paul Allen in 2018, Stratolaunch was sold off, and no longer a billionaire insurgent venture.

Starship HLS

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
Starship HLS
Starship HLS mission

ManufacturerSpaceX
Country of originUnited States
OperatorSpaceX
ApplicationsCrewed reusable lunar lander

Specifications
Launch mass~1,320 t (2,910,000 lb)
RegimeCislunar space

Dimensions
Length50 m (164 ft 1 in)
Width9 m (29 ft 6 in)

Production
StatusIn development
Maiden launchNET 2024

Related spacecraft
Derived fromSpaceX Starship (spacecraft)

Powered byRaptor, RCS thruster bank
PropellantCH4 / LOX

Starship HLS, or Starship Human Landing System, is a lunar lander variant of the Starship spacecraft that is slated to transfer astronauts from a lunar orbit to the surface of the Moon and back. It is being designed and built by SpaceX under the Human Landing System contract to NASA as a critical element of NASA's Artemis program to land a crew on the Moon no earlier than 2026.

The mission plan calls for a Super Heavy booster to launch a Starship HLS into an Earth orbit, where it will be refueled by multiple Starship tanker spacecraft before boosting itself into a lunar near-rectilinear halo orbit (NRHO). There, it will rendezvous with a crewed Orion spacecraft that will be launched from Earth by a NASA Space Launch System (SLS) launcher. A crew of two astronauts will transfer from Orion to HLS, which will then descend to the lunar surface for a stay of approximately 7 days which is to include five or more EVAs. It will then return the crew to Orion in NRHO.

In the third phase of its HLS procurement process NASA awarded SpaceX a contract in April 2021 to develop, produce, and demonstrate Starship HLS. An uncrewed test flight is planned for 2024 to demonstrate a successful landing on the Moon. Following that test, a crewed flight is expected to occur as part of the Artemis 3 mission, no earlier than December 2025. NASA later contracted for an upgraded version of Starship HLS to be used on the Artemis 4 mission.

Design

Starship HLS is a variant of SpaceX's Starship spacecraft optimized to operate on and around the Moon. In contrast to the Starship spacecraft from which it derives, Starship HLS will never reenter an atmosphere, so it does not have a heat shield or flight control surfaces. This makes it much lighter than a regular Starship, so Elon Musk has tweeted that it may only take 4 (rather than 8 for the normal version) tanker Starship launches to refuel a Starship HLS to the point where it has enough fuel for a lunar landing. In contrast to other HLS designs that proposed multiple stages, the entire spacecraft will land on the Moon and will then launch from the Moon. Like other Starship variants, Starship HLS has six Raptor engines mounted at the tail which are used when the Starship HLS acts as the second stage during the launch from Earth. They are also used as its primary propulsion system in all other flight phases. Within 100 meters of the lunar surface, the variant will utilize high‑thrust RCS thrusters located mid‑body to avoid plume impingement problems with the lunar regolith. The thrusters burn gaseous oxygen and methane instead of the liquid oxygen and methane used by the Raptors. However, these thrusters may not be needed. Starship HLS is supplied with electrical power by a band of solar panels around the circumference of the vehicle.

Starship HLS requires in-orbit propellant transfer in its mission profile. Prior to the launch of the HLS vehicle from Earth, a Starship variant configured as a propellant depot would be launched into an Earth orbit and then partially or fully filled by between four and fourteen Starship tanker flights carrying propellant. The Starship HLS vehicle would then launch and rendezvous with the already-loaded propellant depot and refuel before transiting from Earth orbit to Lunar orbit.

Starship HLS incorporates the following design characteristics:

  • approximately 24 midbody oxygen-methane thrusters for use very near the lunar surface
  • 100-day loiter capability in lunar orbit
  • support for a greater number of EVAs on the lunar surface than the minimum required by NASA in the 2020 solicitation
  • excess-propellant margin can be applied to expedite an emergency ascent from the Moon

Within the Artemis lunar landing architecture as of April 2021, a NASA Orion spacecraft is planned to be launched by a Space Launch System rocket and rendezvous with a waiting Starship HLS lander in a near-rectilinear halo orbit around the Moon. The crew of Orion would then dock with, and transfer to Starship HLS, which would subsequently depart and descend to the lunar surface. After lunar surface operations, Starship HLS will lift-off from the Moon and return to lunar orbit to rendezvous with Orion. The crew then transfers back to Orion and departs for Earth. Although not confirmed yet, Starship HLS could, in theory, be refueled in orbit to carry more crews and cargo to the surface.

History

Starship HLS builds on the SpaceX Starship system by adding a new spacecraft variant called Starship HLS. This spacecraft will be used in conjunction with the Starship booster (called Super Heavy) and two additional Starship spacecraft variants, "tanker" and "depot", that were already being planned prior to the HLS contract.

Starship system history

The SpaceX Starship concept was initially conceived in the early 2010s as a spacecraft that would be principally built for the Mars colonization effort that SpaceX CEO Elon Musk has advocated since 2011, with the first colonists arriving no earlier than the middle of the 2020s.

By 2016, the scope became somewhat broader, when Musk realized the high-level design SpaceX had been working on for the Starship vehicle allowed for variants that would be suitable for interplanetary travel more generally, and could work both on planets with and without an atmosphere. Lunar destination flights, however, were not generally emphasized by Musk, and he specifically stated that the Moon was not a necessary step on the path to Mars.

By late 2018, SpaceX had specified the primary construction material for Starship to be stainless steel – after approximately a year of building manufacturing pathfinder hardware out of carbon composite materials—and manufacture of the initial test article including pressure vessel construction for the liquid methane and liquid oxygen tanks began in early 2019.

Between July 2019 and July 2021, seven Starship prototype vehicles, each with different vehicle design configurations and varied test objectives, flew a total of eight atmospheric test flights, all launched from the SpaceX South Texas launch site at Boca Chica, Texas.

Starship HLS history

Initial "Option A" Contract

Starship itself has been in privately-funded development by SpaceX since the mid-2010s, but the HLS (Human Landing System) variant is being developed under contracts with the United States' National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). The initial contracted design work started in May 2020, with selection and funding for full-development occurring in April 2021, when Starship HLS was selected by NASA to land "the first woman and the next man" on the Moon during the Artemis 3 mission, potentially as early as 2024.

NASA signed a US$2.89 billion contract with SpaceX to develop and manufacture Starship HLS, and to conduct two flights – an uncrewed demonstration mission, and a crewed lunar landing. Starship HLS is intended to dock in a lunar NRHO with either the NASA Orion spacecraft or NASA lunar Gateway space station, in order to take on passengers before descending to the lunar surface and return them after ascent.

Starship HLS, with HLS being an initialism for Human Landing System, was first made public when it was initially selected by the NASA in April 2020 for a design study as part of their Artemis program, which aims to land humans on the Moon. SpaceX was one of three teams selected to develop competing lunar lander designs for the Artemis program over a year-long period starting in May 2020. The other landers in consideration were Dynetics HLS, developed by aerospace manufacturer Dynetics, and the Integrated Lander Vehicle, developed by a team led by Blue Origin. NASA intended to later select and fund at most two of these landers to continue to perform initial demonstration flights.

On 16 April 2021, NASA selected only Starship HLS for crewed lunar lander development plus two lunar demonstration flights – one uncrewed and one crewed – no earlier than 2024. The contract is valued at US$2.89 billion over a number of years. Two NASA Artemis astronauts are to land on the first crewed Starship HLS landing. NASA had previously stated that it preferred to fund development of multiple Human Landing System proposals with dissimilar capabilities; however, "only one design was selected for an initial uncrewed demonstration and the first crewed landing, due to significant budget constraints" for the human landing system program imposed by US Congress. NASA stated that the unselected proposals – Dynetics HLS and Blue Origin ILV – as well as landers from other companies would be eligible for later lunar landing contracts.

On 26 April 2021, Blue Origin and Dynetics separately protested the award to SpaceX at the US Government Accountability Office (GAO). On 30 July 2021, the GAO rejected the protests and found that "NASA did not violate procurement law" in awarding the contract to SpaceX, who bid a much lower cost and more capable human and cargo lunar landing capability for NASA Artemis. Soon after GAO rejected the appeal, NASA made the initial $300 million contract payment to SpaceX. The protest action delayed NASA from authorizing work on the contract, and thus delayed the start of work by SpaceX for 95 days. Blue Origin produced infographic posters that highlight the complexity of Starship HLS, for example the fact that on orbit refuelling with cryogenic fuels like that Starship HLS uses has never been demonstrated, while showing its own lunar lander in a positive light by stating that it uses proven technology.

On 13 August 2021, Blue Origin filed a lawsuit in the US Court of Federal Claims challenging "NASA's unlawful and improper evaluation of proposals". Blue Origin asked the court for an injunction to halt further spending by NASA on the existing contract with SpaceX, and NASA stopped work on the contract on 19 August, after SpaceX had been allowed to work on the NASA-specific parts of Starship HLS for just three weeks since the work had been previously halted in April. Reactions to the lawsuit were negative, with many criticizing Blue Origin for causing unnecessary delays to the Artemis program. On 4 November, the court granted the federal government's motion to dismiss the case, and NASA announced that it would resume work with SpaceX as soon as possible.

"Option B" contract

On 23 March 2022, NASA announced it would be exercising "option B", an option under the initial SpaceX HLS contract that would allow a second-generation Starship HLS design to conduct a demonstration mission after Artemis 3.

On 15 November 2022, NASA announced the Option B award of US$1.15 billion, and announced that this crewed landing is to occur as part of Artemis 4. The flight will include docking with the Gateway. The Option B HLS will meet NASA's requirements for a "sustainable" HLS. These include the ability to support a crew of four and longer-duration lunar surface stays.

Subsequent contracts

After NASA awarded the Option A contact to SpaceX, congress directed NASA to award a second HLS contract. NASA responded by creating "Appendix P" for a non-SpaceX sustainable HLS. This lander will be used for Artemis 5 as its crewed demonstration flight. In May 2023, Blue Origin was awarded $3.4 billion by NASA to develop their Blue Moon lunar lander, compared to the $2.89 billion of the original bid that had been awarded to SpaceX for Option A. NASA intends to allow Starship HLS option B and the Blue Moon lander to compete for Artemis missions after Artemis 5.

SpaceX Super Heavy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SpaceX_Super_Heavy

Super Heavy
SpaceX Super Heavy Booster 7, on the orbital launch mount at Starbase, Boca Chica, Texas in February 2023
ManufacturerSpaceX
Country of originUnited States
Used onSpaceX Starship
General characteristics
Height71 m (233 ft)
Diameter9 m (30 ft)
Gross mass3,600,000 kg (7,900,000 lb)
Propellant mass3,400,000 kg (7,500,000 lb)
Empty mass200,000 kg (440,000 lb)
Launch history
Total launches1
    • Prototype: 1
Failed1
(Prototype: IFT-1 in-flight)
First flightApril 20, 2023 (SpaceX Starship orbital test flight)


Super Heavy
Powered by33 Raptor Engine
Maximum thrust74,000 kN (16,700,000 lbf)
PropellantLiquid oxygen/Methane
Large steel cylinder with complex engine mounts and wiring
Underside of a Super Heavy booster prior to engine installation

Super Heavy is the first stage of the SpaceX Starship super heavy-lift launch vehicle, which it composes in combination with the Starship second-stage. As of 2023, Super Heavy prototypes are being flight tested. In April 2023, Super Heavy flew for the first time on the first orbital launch attempt of the Starship rocket.

Manufacturing

According to Eric Berger of Ars Technica, the manufacturing process starts with rolls of steel, which are unrolled, cut, and welded along the cut edge to create a cylinder of 9 m (30 ft) in diameter, 1.82 m (6 ft) in height, and 4 mm (0.16 in) thick, and around 1,600 kg (4,000 lb) in mass. These cylinders, are stacked and welded along their edges to form the outer layer of the rocket. Inside, the methane and oxygen tanks are separated by robot-made domes. Before final assembly, grid fins are added to the interstage, and the chines are added after stacking of the propellant tanks.

Design

The first-stage Super Heavy booster is 71 m (233 ft) tall, 9 m (30 ft) wide, and is composed of four general sections: the engine section, the fuel tank, the oxygen tank, and the interstage including hot staging. Elon Musk has stated that the final design will have a dry mass between 160 t (350,000 lb) and 200 t (440,000 lb), with the tanks weighing 80 t (180,000 lb) and the interstage 20 t (44,000 lb).

Tanks

The fuel tank on the Super Heavy is separated by a common bulkhead, similar to the ones used on the S-II and S-IVB stages on the Saturn V rocket. The oxygen tank has four chines attached. These protect the COPVs, CO2 tanks for fire suppression, as well as providing lift during flight.

The booster's tanks were reported as holding 3,600 t (7,900,000 lb) of propellant, consisting of 2,800 t (6,200,000 lb) of liquid oxygen and 800 t (1,800,000 lb) of liquid methane. However, current booster prototypes can only hold 3,400 t (7,500,000 lb) of propellant.

Engines

The engine section supports the 33 raptor engines during flight. The engines are arranged in three concentric rings. The outer ring of 20 engines is of the "Raptor Boost" configuration with gimbal actuators removed to save weight and a modified injector with reduced throttle performance in exchange for greater thrust. Raptor utilizes a full-flow staged combustion cycle, which has both Oxygen and Methane rich turbopumps.

Prior to 2014, only two full-flow staged-combustion rocket engine designs had advanced enough to undergo testing on test stands: the Soviet RD-270 project in the 1960s and the Aerojet Rocketdyne Integrated Powerhead Demonstrator in the mid-2000s.

At full power, all engines produce a collective 75.9 MN (17,100,000 lbf) of thrust. However, Raptor 3 is planned to bring thrust up to 90 MN (20,000,000 lbf).

Interstage

The interstage is also equipped with four electrically actuated grid fins, each with a mass of 3 t (6,600 lb). Adjacent pairs of grid fins are only spaced sixty degrees apart instead of being orthogonal (as is the case on Falcon 9) to provide more authority in the pitch axis. Unlike Falcon 9, the grid fins do not retract and remain extended during ascent. During unpowered flight in the vacuum of space, control authority is provided by cold gas thrusters fed with residual ullage gas.

The interstage also has protruding hardpoints, located between grid fins, allowing the booster to be lifted or caught by the launch tower.

After the first Starship test flight, all boosters will now have an additional 2m tall vented interstage added, as well as a protective dome. Elon Musk has indicated this change may gain an additional 10% payload to orbit as a result.

Mission profile

About one hour and thirty-nine minutes before flight, the super heavy booster begins propellant load. At the T- 16:40 mark, engine chill begins on the booster. This is to protect the engine's turbopumps from thermal shock. At eight seconds before flight, the thirty-three engines startup-sequence begins.

After liftoff, the engines burn for 169 seconds, at which point 30 of its engines shut off, leaving only three center ones running at 50% thrust. Then, the ship ignites its engines while still attached to the booster and separates. The boostback burn lasts for 55 seconds. About eight minutes to flight, the engines reignite, and the booster is caught by a pair of mechanical arms.

Development

Booster 4 in the High Bay
List of Prototype Boosters
Name First spotted First static fire Maiden flight Decommissioned Construction site Status Flights
BN1 September 2020 30 March 2021 Boca Chica, Texas Scrapped 0
BN3/B3 March 2021 19 July 2021 14 August 2021 Boca Chica, Texas Scrapped 0
B4 3 July 2021 25 March 2022 Boca Chica, Texas Retired 0
B5 19 July 2021 December 2021 Boca Chica, Texas Scrapped 0
B7 29 September 2021 9 August 2022 20 April 2023 20 April 2023 Boca Chica, Texas Destroyed 1
B8 6 October 2021 2022 Boca Chica, Texas Scrapped 0
B9 24 October 2021 6 August 2023 Not yet Not yet Boca Chica, Texas On Orbital launch mount 0
B10 3 August 2022 Not yet Not yet Not yet Boca Chica, Texas In Mega Bay for engine installation 0
B11 ? Not yet Not yet Not yet Boca Chica, Texas At Massey's Test Site for cryogenic testing 0
B12 ? Not yet Not yet Not yet Boca Chica, Texas In Mega Bay, stacking complete 0
B13 ? Not yet Not yet Not yet Boca Chica, Texas In Mega Bay, stacking underway 0
B14 ? Not yet Not yet Not yet Boca Chica, Texas Parts under construction 0
B15 ? Not yet Not yet Not yet Boca Chica, Texas Parts under construction 0
B16 ? Not yet Not yet Not yet Boca Chica, Texas Parts under construction 0
  • 78% of 3,600 t (7,900,000 lb) is 2,800 t (6,200,000 lb) of liquid oxygen.

    1. The date of the first part for the booster being spotted

    Boosters do not have an engine skirt. Without engines, boosters are about 3 meters shorter.

    BN1

    BN1 was the first Super-Heavy Booster prototype, a pathfinder that was not intended for flight tests. Sections of the ~70 m (230 ft) tall test article were manufactured throughout the fall. Section stacking began in December 2020. BN1 was fully stacked inside the High Bay on 18 March. On 30 March 2021, BN1 was scrapped.

    BN3/B3

    BN3 (Booster 3) was used for ground tests. A cryogenic proof test was completed (13 July 2021). Booster 3 completed stacking in the High Bay (29 June 2021), and moved to the test pad without engines. Three engines were subsequently added.

    A static fire test was conducted 19 July 2021. BN3/Booster 3 was partially scrapped on 15 August 2021, while the LOX tank remained welded to the Test Stand. The LOX tank was taken off the Test Stand on the 13th January 2022.

    B4

    Booster 4 first became visible on 3 July 2021. Musk ordered several hundred SpaceX employees at Hawthorne to relocate to Boca Chica to accelerate the development of SN20, BN4, and the Orbital Launch Platform in an attempt to put the Starship system on the pad by 5 August 2021. BN4 was fully stacked on 1 August, with a full complement of 29 engines installed on 2 August 2021. Grid fins were added to support atmospheric reentry testing.

    SN20 was stacked on top of Booster 4 on 6 August 2021 for a fitting test, making it the largest rocket ever. Booster 4 was then returned to the High Bay for secondary wiring. On 9 September 2021, Booster 4 came again to the launch site on top of the Orbital Launch mount.

    B4 completed its first cryogenic proof test (17 December 2021), and a pneumatic proof test (19 December 2021). It underwent another cryogenic proof test and a full-load cryogenic proof test. B4 and Ship 20 were then retired.

    B5

    Parts for B5 were observed as early as 19 July 2021. Stacking for BN5 completed in November, although on 8 December 2021, B5 retired to stand alongside SN15 and SN16.

    B7

    Parts for B7 were first spotted on 29 September 2021. B7 was placed on the orbital launch mount on 31 March 2022. After completing a cryogenic proof test on 4 April 2022, it was placed onto the new booster test stand on 8 April 2022. B7 completed another cryogenic test on 14 April 2022, but the downcomer suffered a failure and ruptured. On 18 April 2022, B7 returned to the production site for repairs. On 5 May 2022, B7 was again placed on the orbital launch mount. B7 then completed two cryogenic tests on 9 and 11 May 2022. It was then returned back to the production site and entered the new Mega Bay (also known as Wide Bay or High Bay 2), for repairs and additional equipment, upgraded grid fins and engines, and two more 'chines' or 'strakes' (triangular structures placed on the aft section to aid in aerodynamic control). B7 went through more testing (11 July 2022) where it experienced an anomaly during an attempted 33 engine spin prime test and a detonation occurred underneath the engines. The booster then rolled back to the Mega Bay. B7 was transported back to the orbital launch pad with 20 outer Raptor engines (August 4 to August 5, 2022) and completed its first single engine static fire test (August 9, 2022). B7 completed a 20-second static fire (August 11, 2022), the longest static fire on a Starship prototype to date. Following a successful set of tests, it returned to the production site to receive the remaining 13 engines. B7 was lifted back onto the launch mount using the chopsticks catching and lifting system (23 August 2022). It underwent further testing including its 13 inner engines (26 August 2022). B7 completed a multi-engine static fire (31 August 2022). This was followed by multiple spin prime tests, and a seven-engine static fire on 19 September 2022. B7 again returned to the Mega Bay on 21 September 2022. After upgrades it was again lifted on the launch pad (8 October 2022). Ship 24 was then stacked on top B7 (12 October 2022) and was removed after completing multiple cryogenic load tests. B7 then completed a spin prime test of multiple engines, (12 November 2022) and afterwards a 14 engine static fire test, (14 November 2022) and finally an 11 engine static fire in an autogenous pressurization test (29 November 2022). On December 9, 2022, B7 rolled back to the Mega Bay for further shielding. In January 2023, Booster 7 was rolled back to the launch site where it was stacked with Ship 24 on the OLM for partial and full Wet Dress Rehearsals (Jan 23) before Ship 24 was destacked and sent to the Rocket Garden for final TPS work. On February 9, 2023, Booster 7 attempted a 10 second duration 33-engine static fire where 31 of the 33 engines successfully fired for the full duration. One of its engines was disabled just prior to testing, and one engine shutdown prematurely. On April 20, 2023, it was intentionally destroyed in the SpaceX Starship Integrated Flight Test after spinning out of control. 

    B8

    The first part of the booster, the engine thrust puck, was spotted on October 5, 2021. Other parts for B8 were observed on February 3, 2022. The booster was fully stacked on July 8, 2022. It travelled to the launch site on 19 September 2022. Booster 8 was scrapped soon after in favor of Booster 9, Booster 8's HPU's were placed on Booster 7 along with other parts.

    B9

    The engine thrust puck of the booster was first spotted on October 24, 2021. The vehicle finished stacking in late 2022, and was moved to the OLS cryo station on December 15, 2022. Two cryogenic proof tests were conducted on December 21, 2022, and December 29, 2022, both of which were successful. The booster was rolled back to the Mega Bay on January 10, 2023. Among many other upgrades, Booster 9 is the first to feature an electric Thrust Vector Control (often abbreviated to ETVC) gimbaling system of the raptor engines. This system replaces the hydraulics HPU's that were used until Booster 8. Booster 9 is currently slated to fly with Ship 25 on the second Integrated Flight Test. On July 20, Booster 9 was rolled out to the launch site. Later, in the night of July 20 to July 21, it was lifted onto the Orbital Launch Mount in preparation for its testing campaign. On July 23 Booster 9 performed a cryogenic prof test on the orbital launch mount. This was followed by a Spin Prime on August 4, 2023. On August 6, 2023, Booster 9 fired 29 engines for 2.7 seconds, instead of the planned 33 engines for 5 seconds. It was then moved off of the Orbital Launch Mount, and rolled back to the Mega Bay, where it's hot staging extension was added on August 16, 2023. B9 was moved back onto the Orbital Launch Mount on August 22, 2023, and underwent another spin prime test the next day. On August 25, 2023, Booster 9 underwent a static fire of all 33 engines, lasting around 6 seconds. Two engines shut off early during the test. On September 5, 2023, S25 was lifted onto B9 for the first time. On September 14, 2023, S25 was removed from B9, followed one week later by the Vented Interstage. On September 26, 2023, the Vented Interstage was lifted onto B9, only to be removed on October 9, 2023.

    B10 and subsequent

    Not much is known about boosters 10 and 11, except that they also use booster 9's ETVC, as well as elliptical domes. B10 was fully stacked in March 2023. In June 2023, B11 was fully stacked, and B12 began assembly. On July 19, 2023, B10 underwent a cryogenic proof test. It was later moved to the rocket garden, and was then moved to the Mega Bay. However, on September 10, 2023, B10 was moved back to Masseys on a Thrust Simulator Stand. A croygenic test was performed 3 days later. As of September 13, 2023, it is unknown whether the Thrust Simulator was used during the test. It was moved back to the Mega Bay on September 20, 2023, presumably for engine and interstage installation. On October 12, 2023, B11 was moved to the Masseys test site on a Thrust Simulator Stand, where it was cryo tested two days later.

    Test articles

    Super Heavy test articles
    Name First spotted Decommissioned Construction site Cur. location Status Tests
    TT1 January 2020 10 January 2020 Boca Chica, Texas Intentionally destroyed 1
    TT2 January 2020 29 January 2020 Boca Chica, Texas Intentionally destroyed 2
    BN2.1 3 June 2021 25 June 2021 Boca Chica, Texas production site Retired 2
    GSE 4.1 August 2021 18 January 2022 Boca Chica, Texas Intentionally destroyed 2
    B2.1 October 2021 6 December 2022 Boca Chica, Texas production site Retired 3
    B6.1 December 2021 May 2023 Boca Chica, Texas Intentionally destroyed 1
    B7.1 2022 Not yet Boca Chica, Texas Massey's Potentially retired 6
    EDOME 2022 Late October 2022 Boca Chica, Texas Massey's Intentionally destroyed 2
    HSLH July 2023 Not yet Boca Chica, Texas Massey's Potentially retired 2

    General test articles

    Test Tank 1 (TT1) was a subscale test tank consisting of two forward bulkheads connected by a small barrel section. TT1 was used to test new materials and construction methods. On 10 January 2020, TT1 was filled with water and tested to failure as part of an ambient temperature test, reaching a pressure of 7.1 bar (103 psi).

    Test Tank 2 (TT2) was another subscale test tank similar to TT1. On 27 January 2020, TT2 underwent an ambient temperature pressure test where it reached a pressure of 7.5 bar (109 psi) before a leak occurred. Two days later, it underwent a cryogenic proof test to destruction, bursting at 8.5 bar (123 psi).

    GSE 4.1 was first spotted in August 2021, and was the first ground support equipment (GSE) test tank built, made from parts of GSE 4. It underwent a cryogenic proof test (August 23) before it was rolled to Sanchez site. It was rolled back to the launch site in November 2021 and underwent an apparent cryogenic proof test to failure (January 18), where it burst at an unknown pressure.

    EDOME is a test tank created to test flatter domes, possibly used on future Starship prototypes. It was moved to the launch site in July 2022, and back to the production site the next month, and never received testing. It was later moved from the production site to the new Masseys site on 22 September 2022, which conducts non-flight hardware testing. On 30 September 2022, it burst during a cryogenic pressure test to failure. After repairs, it was tested to destruction in late October 2022.

    Super Heavy-based test articles

    BN2.1 was rolled out on 3 June 2021for cryogenic tests (8 June) and (17 June).

    B2.1 (not BN2.1) survived three cryogenic tests on 1, 2, and 3 December.

    B6.1 was originally intended to be the third super heavy intended for flight, but was repurposed as a test tank. In May 2023, it was used to test the modified FTS system, after the FTS on B7 and S24 failed to destroy the vehicle.

    B7.1 was first cryogenically proof tested on 28 June 2022, and tested again on 19 July 2022. During a suspected pressurize to failure test two days later, it received minor damage. After repairs, it underwent a fourth cryogenic proof test (27 July), a fifth (1 September), and a sixth five days later. It then rolled back to the production site (16 September). B7.1 left the production site (22 September) to head to the new Masseys site.

    Hot Stage Load Head (HSLH) is a test article designed for verify the structural integrity of the interstage of Super Heavy Boosters 9+. It was transported to the Massey's test site on July 30, 2023, before being loaded onto the Can Crusher testing device. As of August 29, 2023, it is believed to have completed testing.

    Multiple independently targetable reentry vehicle

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multiple_independently_targetable_reentry_vehicle

    The MIRV U.S. Peacekeeper missile, with the re-entry vehicles highlighted in red.
    Technicians secure a number of Mk21 re-entry vehicles on a Peacekeeper MIRV bus.
    LGM-118A Peacekeeper MIRV at the National Museum of the United States Air Force.
    A Trident II missile, operated exclusively by the US Navy and Royal Navy. Each missile can carry up to 14 warheads.

    A multiple independently targetable reentry vehicle (MIRV) is an exoatmospheric ballistic missile payload containing several warheads, each capable of being aimed to hit a different target. The concept is almost invariably associated with intercontinental ballistic missiles carrying thermonuclear warheads, even if not strictly being limited to them. By contrast, a unitary warhead is a single warhead on a single missile. An intermediate case is the multiple reentry vehicle (MRV) missile which carries several warheads which are dispersed but not individually aimed. Only the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Russia and China are currently confirmed to have deployed MIRV missile systems. Pakistan is developing MIRV missile systems. Israel is suspected to possess or be in the process of developing MIRVs.

    The first true MIRV design was the Minuteman III, first successfully tested in 1968 and introduced into actual use in 1970. The Minuteman III held three smaller W62 warheads, with yields of about 170 kilotons of TNT (710 TJ) each in place of the single 1.2 megatons of TNT (5.0 PJ) W56 used in the earlier versions of this missile. From 1970 to 1975, the United States would remove approximately 550 earlier versions of the Minuteman ICBM in the Strategic Air Command's (SAC) arsenal and replace them with the new Minuteman IIIs outfitted with a MIRV payload, increasing their overall effectiveness. The smaller power of the warhead was offset by increasing the accuracy of the system, allowing it to attack the same hard targets as the larger, less accurate, W56. The MMIII was introduced specifically to address the Soviet construction of an anti-ballistic missile (ABM) system around Moscow; MIRV allowed the US to overwhelm any conceivable ABM system without increasing the size of their own missile fleet. The Soviets responded by adding MIRV to their R-36 design, first with three warheads in 1975, and eventually up to ten in later versions. While the United States phased out the use of MIRVs in ICBMs in 2014 to comply with New START, Russia continues to develop new ICBM designs using the technology.

    The introduction of MIRV led to a major change in the strategic balance. Previously, with one warhead per missile, it was conceivable that one could build a defense that used missiles to attack individual warheads. Any increase in missile fleet by the enemy could be countered by a similar increase in interceptors. With MIRV, a single new enemy missile meant that multiple interceptors would have to be built, meaning that it was much less expensive to increase the attack than the defense. This cost-exchange ratio was so heavily biased towards the attacker that the concept of mutual assured destruction became the leading concept in strategic planning and ABM systems were severely limited in the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty in order to avoid a massive arms race.

    Purpose

    The military purpose of a MIRV is fourfold:

    • Enhance first-strike proficiency for strategic forces.
    • Providing greater target damage for a given thermonuclear weapon payload. Several small and lower yield warheads cause much more target damage area than a single warhead alone. This, in turn, reduces the number of missiles and launch facilities required for a given destruction level - much the same as the purpose of a cluster munition.
    • With single-warhead missiles, one missile must be launched for each target. By contrast, with a MIRV warhead, the post-boost (or bus) stage can dispense the warheads against multiple targets across a broad area.
    • Reduces the effectiveness of an anti-ballistic missile system that relies on intercepting individual warheads. While a MIRV attacking missile can have multiple warheads (3-12 on United States and Russian missiles, or 14 in a maximum payload shorter-range configuration of the Trident II now barred by START), interceptors may have only one warhead per missile. Thus, in both a military and an economic sense, MIRVs render ABM systems less effective, as the costs of maintaining a workable defense against MIRVs would greatly increase, requiring multiple defensive missiles for each offensive one. Decoy re-entry vehicles can be used alongside actual warheads to minimize the chances of the actual warheads being intercepted before they reach their targets. A system that destroys the missile earlier in its trajectory (before MIRV separation) is not affected by this but is more difficult, and thus more expensive to implement.

    MIRV land-based ICBMs were considered destabilizing because they tended to put a premium on striking first. The world's first MIRV—US Minuteman III missile of 1970—threatened to rapidly increase the US's deployable nuclear arsenal and thus the possibility that it would have enough bombs to destroy virtually all of the Soviet Union's nuclear weapons and negate any significant retaliation. Later on the US feared the Soviet's MIRVs because Soviet missiles had a greater throw-weight and could thus put more warheads on each missile than the US could. For example, the US MIRVs might have increased their warhead per missile count by a factor of 6 while the Soviets increased theirs by a factor of 10. Furthermore, the US had a much smaller proportion of its nuclear arsenal in ICBMs than the Soviets. Bombers could not be outfitted with MIRVs so their capacity would not be multiplied. Thus the US did not seem to have as much potential for MIRV usage as the Soviets. However, the US had a larger number of submarine-launched ballistic missiles, which could be outfitted with MIRVs, and helped offset the ICBM disadvantage. It is because of their first-strike capability that land-based MIRVs were banned under the START II agreement. START II was ratified by the Russian Duma on 14 April 2000, but Russia withdrew from the treaty in 2002 after the US withdrew from the ABM treaty.

    Mode of operation

    In a MIRV, the main rocket motor (or booster) pushes a "bus" (see illustration) into a free-flight suborbital ballistic flight path. After the boost phase, the bus maneuvers using small on-board rocket motors and a computerized inertial guidance system. It takes up a ballistic trajectory that will deliver a re-entry vehicle containing a warhead to a target and then releases a warhead on that trajectory. It then maneuvers to a different trajectory, releasing another warhead, and repeats the process for all warheads.

    Minuteman III MIRV launch sequence: 1. The missile launches out of its silo by firing its first-stage boost motor (A). 2. About 60 seconds after launch, the first-stage drops off and the second-stage motor (B) ignites. The missile shroud (E) is ejected. 3. About 120 seconds after launch, the third-stage motor (C) ignites and separates from the second-stage. 4. About 180 seconds after launch, the third-stage thrust terminates and the post-boost vehicle (D) separates from the rocket. 5. The post-boost vehicle maneuvers itself and prepares for re-entry vehicle (RV) deployment. 6. While the post-boost vehicle backs away, the RVs, decoys, and chaff are deployed (this may occur during ascent). 7. The RVs and chaff reenter the atmosphere at high speeds and are armed in flight. 8. The nuclear warheads detonate, either as air bursts or ground bursts.

    The precise technical details are closely guarded military secrets, to hinder any development of enemy counter-measures. The bus's on-board propellant limits the distances between targets of individual warheads to perhaps a few hundred kilometers. Some warheads may use small hypersonic airfoils during the descent to gain additional cross-range distance. Additionally, some buses (e.g. the British Chevaline system) can release decoys to confuse interception devices and radars, such as aluminized balloons or electronic noisemakers.

    Testing of the Peacekeeper reentry vehicles: all eight (of a possible ten) were fired from only one missile. Each line shows the path of an individual warhead captured on reentry via long-exposure photography.

    Accuracy is crucial because doubling the accuracy decreases the needed warhead energy by a factor of four for radiation damage and by a factor of eight for blast damage. Navigation system accuracy and the available geophysical information limits the warhead target accuracy. Some writers believe that government-supported geophysical mapping initiatives and ocean satellite altitude systems such as Seasat may have a covert purpose to map mass concentrations and determine local gravity anomalies, in order to improve accuracies of ballistic missiles. Accuracy is expressed as circular error probable (CEP). This is the radius of the circle that the warhead has a 50 percent chance of falling into when aimed at the center. CEP is about 90–100 m for the Trident II and Peacekeeper missiles.

    MRV

    A multiple re-entry vehicle (MRV) system for a ballistic missile deploys multiple warheads above a single aimpoint which then drift apart, producing a cluster bomb-like effect. These warheads are not individually targetable. The advantage of an MRV over a single warhead is the increased effectiveness due to the greater coverage; this increases the overall damage produced within the center of the pattern, making it far greater than the damage possible from any single warhead in the MRV cluster; this makes for an efficient area-attack weapon and makes interception by anti-ballistic missiles more challenging due to the number of warheads being deployed at once.

    Improved warhead designs allow smaller warheads for a given yield, while better electronics and guidance systems allow greater accuracy. As a result, MIRV technology has proven more attractive than MRV for advanced nations. Multiple-warhead missiles require both a miniaturized physics package and a lower mass re-entry vehicle, both of which are highly advanced technologies. As a result, single-warhead missiles are more attractive for nations with less advanced or less productive nuclear technology. The United States first deployed MRV warheads on the Polaris A-3 SLBM in 1964 on the USS Daniel Webster. The Polaris A-3 missile carried three warheads each having an approximate yield of 200 kilotonnes of TNT (840 TJ). This system was also used by the Royal Navy who also retained MRV with the Chevaline upgrade, though the number of warheads in Chevaline was reduced to two due to the ABM counter-measures carried. The Soviet Union deployed 3 MRVs on the R-27U SLBM and 3 MRVs on the R-36P ICBM. Refer to atmospheric re-entry for more details.

    MIRV-capable missiles

    China
    • DF-3A (retired, 3 warheads)
    • DF-4A (retired, 3 warheads)
    • DF-5B (active, 3-8 warheads)
    • DF-5C (active, 10 warheads)
    • DF-31A (active, 3-5 warheads)
    • DF-31B (active, 3-5 warheads)
    • DF-41 (active, up to 10 warheads)
    • JL-2 (active, 1-3 warheads)
    • JL-3 (under development)
    France
    • M4 (retired, 6 warheads)
    • M45 (active, 6 warheads)
    • M51 (active, 6-10 warheads)
    India
    Iran

    Israel

    • Jericho 3 (active, suspected capability, not announced, 2-3 technically possible)
    Pakistan
    • Ababeel (Under trials, MIRV demonstration pending)
    USSR/Russian Federation
    RSD-10 Pioneer MIRV at the National Air and Space Museum
    United Kingdom
    United States

    Authorship of the Bible

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