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Miura 5

Miura 5 is a two-stage European orbital recoverable launch vehicle currently under development by the Spanish company PLD Space. In a standard two-stage configuration, it will have a length of 34 m, be capable of inserting 1000 kg of payload into a low Earth orbit (LEO), featuring an optional kick stage that can circularize the orbits of satellites.[4]

Miura 5
A reuse test small-scale first stage of Miura 5 in El Arenosillo
Functionpartially reusable launch vehicle to low Earth orbit
ManufacturerPLD Space
Country of originSpain
Size
Height35.7 m (117 ft)[1]
Diameter2.0 m (6 ft 7 in)[1]
Mass
  • 68,742 kg
Stages2–3
Capacity
Payload to Low Earth orbit (LEO)
Mass1,080 kg (2,380 lb)[1]
Payload to SSO
Mass540 kg (1,190 lb)[1]
Associated rockets
ComparableShavit 2, Prime, Electron
Launch history
StatusUnder development
Launch sitesEl Hierro Launch Centre (proposed)

Guiana Space Centre (planned)

Azores (proposed)
First flightQ1 2026 (planned)[2]
First stage
Height26.3 m (86 ft)[3]
Diameter2.0 m (6 ft 7 in)
Powered by5 TEPREL-C
Maximum thrust950 kN (210,000 lbf)
Burn time182 s.[1]
PropellantLOX / RP-1
Second stage
Height12.1 m (40 ft)
Powered by1 TEPREL-C vacuum
Maximum thrust50 kN (11,000 lbf)
Burn time420 s.[1]
PropellantLOX / RP-1
Kick stage (optional)

Development of the Miura 5 has been sponsored by the European Space Agency (ESA) via the agency's Future Launchers Preparatory Programme (FLPP); additional support has come from the French space agency CNES and the Spanish agency National Institute for Aerospace Technology (INTA). Work commenced during the mid-2010s under the name Arion 2, the present name was adopted following a redesign that doubled the lift capacity of the launcher during 2018. On 11 April 2019, PLD Space carried out a successful drop and recovery test of the first stage of a Miura 5 demonstrator. As of December 2023, the first test flight of Miura 5 is expected to take place sometime in early 2026.[2]

Design edit

 
Downscale testing vehicle used during drop test in 2019

The Miura 5 has been designed to reuse the majority of the technology developed for the preceding Miura 1. However, many of these technologies will be refined substantially to incorporate lessons learnt with the earlier rocket.[5][6] New design elements include the propellant tanks and engine; it remains a liquid fuel rocket.[7] Many elements of the Miura 5, including the propulsion system, structures, and avionics development, will be designed and produced in-house.[8][9]

The Miura 5 is to be propelled by a single TEPREL-C turbopump engine, unlike its predecessor, which used a pressurized tank cycle instead.[10]

A key feature of the Miura 5 is its reusable first stage. The recovery process shall employ a combination of engine thrust and parachutes.[11] While furnished with a larger parachute arrangement to account for the larger scale of the Miura 5, the various subsystems controlling the recovery are identical those used on the Miura 1.[8] The launcher's reuse capabilities have reportedly been scaled as to permit each rocket to be launched a maximum of three times.[12]

The Miura 5 was originally envisioned to have a lift capacity of 150 kilograms; in comparison to Vega, Arianespace’s smallest launcher, it was to be capable of carrying roughly one-tenth of the payload.[11] It is specifically intended for the launching of small satellites into low Earth orbit (LEO).[11] However, mid-way through the design process, the Miura 5's lift capacity was doubled in response to formal recommendations produced by the ESA in 2018.[4] It will be typically operated as a two stage launcher, although provisions will be made for individual rockets to be expandable to three stages when a greater lift capacity or altitude is required.[13]

Development edit

LPSR Program edit

During October 2016, the European Space Agency (ESA) announced the selection of the Spanish aerospace start-up PLD Space as the main contractor of the LPSR ("Liquid Propulsion Stage Recovery") program, one part of the agency's Future Launchers Preparatory Programme (FLPP).[8] The company was allocated an initial contribution of €750,000 towards the early development of a reusable first stage of a future space launch system; the long-term objective is to provide the reusable first stage for what later became the Miura 5. Various options for recovery were examined, primarily involving the use of parachutes; other methods, such as the use of controlled paragliders or ballutes, were also explored at this stage. Some early testing of the system was performed using the smaller Miura 1 rocket.[14][8]

Early on in its development, the launch vehicle was referred to as Arion 2; however, following the completion of a ten-month review conducted by the ESA and the decision to redesign the launcher to facilitate launches up to 300 kilograms to a 500-kilometer orbit, it was decided to adopt the name Miura 5.[4][15]

Test flights and partnerships edit

On 11 April 2019, with the assistance of the Spanish Army, PLD Space performed a successful drop and recovery test of the first stage of a Miura 5 demonstrator at El Arenosillo Test Center.[16] This demonstration stage, which had a reduced 1.5 m diameter instead of 1.8 m, was dropped by a Boeing CH-47 Chinook helicopter from a height of 5 km. It slowed its rate of descent using a total of three parachutes before performing a water landing, at which point it had been descending at a rate of roughly ten meters per second. The demonstrator was recovered by divers and brought back to Mazagón by a tugboat to be thoroughly examined.[17][18]

During July 2019, it was announced that PLD Space had reached an agreement with the French space agency CNES to study the launch of Miura 5 at the Guiana Space Centre (CSG) in French Guiana.[19] Under a separate arrangement, the Spanish agency National Institute for Aerospace Technology (INTA) has also worked with PLD Space in securing a launch site at the El Hierro Launch Centre, which has been claimed by the company to be the optimal choice from a technical perspective.[20] PLD Space has also publicly commented on the possibility of conducting launches from the planned spaceport in Azores, but the status of this proposal is presently uncertain.[3] Company officials have estimated that the construction of a suitable ground facilities for launching will cost roughly €15 million.[21]

During 2021, in light of the successful drop testing of the first stage, the ESA awarded a new contract to PD Space to continue with development of the Miura 5.[8] During mid 2023, an agreement was signed with CNES for the future maiden launch of the Miura 5 to be conducted at Guiana.[21][5]

Launch schedule edit

As of December 2023, the first test flight of Miura 5 is expected to take place sometime in early 2026.[2] The initial model, which is planned to be used for the first two flights, will be entirely expendable. It will be superseded by an improved model of the Miura 5 that uses the recoverable first stage, which is intended to perform the planned commercial launches.[8]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f @RaulTorresPLD (18 January 2022). "Thread 👉 Happy to give you accurate #MIURA5 figures: maximum payload mass to reference mission (500km SSO): 450kg . Maximum payload to orbit : 900kg (equatorial launch). Launch site is CSG in French Guiana" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  2. ^ a b c Pinedo, Emma (20 October 2023). "Spain's PLD Space expects first orbital launch in Q1 2026 from French Guiana". Reuters. Retrieved 5 December 2023.
  3. ^ a b Gallego, Pablo (August 2020). "MIURA 5: The European and Reusable Microlauncher for CubeSats and Small Satellites". Small Satellite Conference.
  4. ^ a b c "PLD Space, after ESA input, doubles lift capacity of smallsat launcher". spacenews.com. 28 November 2018.
  5. ^ a b Pons, Juan (23 October 2023). "PLD wants its Miura 5 rocket to take off from French Guiana in early 2026". atalayar.com.
  6. ^ Young, Chris (12 October 2023). "Spain rocket launch could be turning point for European spaceflight". interestingengineering.com.
  7. ^ @RaulTorresPLD (29 August 2021). "Comenzaremos la fabricación del primer MIURA5 pero por supuesto necesitamos que vuele MIURA1 para validar y transferir muchas tecnologías. Otras, como los motores TEPREL-C o los tanques de propelente son nuevas. Esperamos tener a principios del próximo año hardware de ensayo" (Tweet) (in Spanish) – via Twitter.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Sanmiguel, Pablo Gallego (March 2022). "PLD Space Secures The Next Steps for the MIURA Launches". satmagazine.com.
  9. ^ Duboust, Oceane (7 April 2023). "SpaceX competitor? A Spanish start-up is ready to launch Europe's first reusable rocket". euronews.com.
  10. ^ "MIURA 1 - Payload User's guide" (PDF). Payload Aerospace S.L. 13 November 2018. p. 10. (PDF) from the original on 7 October 2023. Retrieved 2 January 2024.
  11. ^ a b c Henry, Caleb (11 June 2018). "PLD Space raises additional $10 million for reusable smallsat launchers". spacenews.com. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  12. ^ "ESA Microlaunch Services Workshop Presentation" (PDF). 6 November 2018.
  13. ^ Dickinson, David (12 June 2023). "Startup PLD Space to Launch Europe's First Reusable Rocket". universetoday.com.
  14. ^ Marín, Daniel (2 November 2016). "PLD Space: el primer cohete reutilizable europeo" [PLD Space: the first European reusable rocket]. naukas.com (in Spanish).
  15. ^ (Press release). PLD Space. 13 November 2018. Archived from the original on 2 February 2020. Retrieved 3 March 2019.
  16. ^ info-space.com (15 April 2019). "PLD Space and the Spanish Army pass the first drop test of Miura 5 – Info-Space News Spain". infoespacial.com. Retrieved 2 August 2020.
  17. ^ Sheldon, John (17 April 2019). "Spain's PLD Space Successfully Completes Miura-5 Reusable Booster Drop Test". spacewatch.global.
  18. ^ "Reusability: Drop test of microlauncher's demonstration first stage". European Space Agency. 15 April 2019.
  19. ^ @PLD_Space (1 July 2019). "Today @PLD_Space and @CNES , and with the support of @CDTIoficial signed at #EUCASS2019 a preliminary Agreement to…" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  20. ^ "Teniente general José María Salom, director general del INTA – Noticias Defensa En abierto". defensa.com. 14 April 2019.
  21. ^ a b Garay, Jon (9 October 2023). "As Spain enters the space race, this is the successor to the Miura-1 rocket that will be three times taller and thirty times more powerful". surinenglish.com.

External links edit

  • Official Miura 5 product website

miura, stage, european, orbital, recoverable, launch, vehicle, currently, under, development, spanish, company, space, standard, stage, configuration, will, have, length, capable, inserting, 1000, payload, into, earth, orbit, featuring, optional, kick, stage, . Miura 5 is a two stage European orbital recoverable launch vehicle currently under development by the Spanish company PLD Space In a standard two stage configuration it will have a length of 34 m be capable of inserting 1000 kg of payload into a low Earth orbit LEO featuring an optional kick stage that can circularize the orbits of satellites 4 Miura 5A reuse test small scale first stage of Miura 5 in El ArenosilloFunctionpartially reusable launch vehicle to low Earth orbitManufacturerPLD SpaceCountry of originSpainSizeHeight35 7 m 117 ft 1 Diameter2 0 m 6 ft 7 in 1 Mass68 742 kgStages2 3CapacityPayload to Low Earth orbit LEO Mass1 080 kg 2 380 lb 1 Payload to SSOMass540 kg 1 190 lb 1 Associated rocketsComparableShavit 2 Prime ElectronLaunch historyStatusUnder developmentLaunch sitesEl Hierro Launch Centre proposed Guiana Space Centre planned Azores proposed First flightQ1 2026 planned 2 First stageHeight26 3 m 86 ft 3 Diameter2 0 m 6 ft 7 in Powered by5 TEPREL CMaximum thrust950 kN 210 000 lbf Burn time182 s 1 PropellantLOX RP 1Second stageHeight12 1 m 40 ft Powered by1 TEPREL C vacuumMaximum thrust50 kN 11 000 lbf Burn time420 s 1 PropellantLOX RP 1Kick stage optional edit on Wikidata Development of the Miura 5 has been sponsored by the European Space Agency ESA via the agency s Future Launchers Preparatory Programme FLPP additional support has come from the French space agency CNES and the Spanish agency National Institute for Aerospace Technology INTA Work commenced during the mid 2010s under the name Arion 2 the present name was adopted following a redesign that doubled the lift capacity of the launcher during 2018 On 11 April 2019 PLD Space carried out a successful drop and recovery test of the first stage of a Miura 5 demonstrator As of December 2023 the first test flight of Miura 5 is expected to take place sometime in early 2026 2 Contents 1 Design 2 Development 2 1 LPSR Program 2 2 Test flights and partnerships 3 Launch schedule 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksDesign edit nbsp Downscale testing vehicle used during drop test in 2019 The Miura 5 has been designed to reuse the majority of the technology developed for the preceding Miura 1 However many of these technologies will be refined substantially to incorporate lessons learnt with the earlier rocket 5 6 New design elements include the propellant tanks and engine it remains a liquid fuel rocket 7 Many elements of the Miura 5 including the propulsion system structures and avionics development will be designed and produced in house 8 9 The Miura 5 is to be propelled by a single TEPREL C turbopump engine unlike its predecessor which used a pressurized tank cycle instead 10 A key feature of the Miura 5 is its reusable first stage The recovery process shall employ a combination of engine thrust and parachutes 11 While furnished with a larger parachute arrangement to account for the larger scale of the Miura 5 the various subsystems controlling the recovery are identical those used on the Miura 1 8 The launcher s reuse capabilities have reportedly been scaled as to permit each rocket to be launched a maximum of three times 12 The Miura 5 was originally envisioned to have a lift capacity of 150 kilograms in comparison to Vega Arianespace s smallest launcher it was to be capable of carrying roughly one tenth of the payload 11 It is specifically intended for the launching of small satellites into low Earth orbit LEO 11 However mid way through the design process the Miura 5 s lift capacity was doubled in response to formal recommendations produced by the ESA in 2018 4 It will be typically operated as a two stage launcher although provisions will be made for individual rockets to be expandable to three stages when a greater lift capacity or altitude is required 13 Development editLPSR Program edit During October 2016 the European Space Agency ESA announced the selection of the Spanish aerospace start up PLD Space as the main contractor of the LPSR Liquid Propulsion Stage Recovery program one part of the agency s Future Launchers Preparatory Programme FLPP 8 The company was allocated an initial contribution of 750 000 towards the early development of a reusable first stage of a future space launch system the long term objective is to provide the reusable first stage for what later became the Miura 5 Various options for recovery were examined primarily involving the use of parachutes other methods such as the use of controlled paragliders or ballutes were also explored at this stage Some early testing of the system was performed using the smaller Miura 1 rocket 14 8 Early on in its development the launch vehicle was referred to as Arion 2 however following the completion of a ten month review conducted by the ESA and the decision to redesign the launcher to facilitate launches up to 300 kilograms to a 500 kilometer orbit it was decided to adopt the name Miura 5 4 15 Test flights and partnerships edit On 11 April 2019 with the assistance of the Spanish Army PLD Space performed a successful drop and recovery test of the first stage of a Miura 5 demonstrator at El Arenosillo Test Center 16 This demonstration stage which had a reduced 1 5 m diameter instead of 1 8 m was dropped by a Boeing CH 47 Chinook helicopter from a height of 5 km It slowed its rate of descent using a total of three parachutes before performing a water landing at which point it had been descending at a rate of roughly ten meters per second The demonstrator was recovered by divers and brought back to Mazagon by a tugboat to be thoroughly examined 17 18 During July 2019 it was announced that PLD Space had reached an agreement with the French space agency CNES to study the launch of Miura 5 at the Guiana Space Centre CSG in French Guiana 19 Under a separate arrangement the Spanish agency National Institute for Aerospace Technology INTA has also worked with PLD Space in securing a launch site at the El Hierro Launch Centre which has been claimed by the company to be the optimal choice from a technical perspective 20 PLD Space has also publicly commented on the possibility of conducting launches from the planned spaceport in Azores but the status of this proposal is presently uncertain 3 Company officials have estimated that the construction of a suitable ground facilities for launching will cost roughly 15 million 21 During 2021 in light of the successful drop testing of the first stage the ESA awarded a new contract to PD Space to continue with development of the Miura 5 8 During mid 2023 an agreement was signed with CNES for the future maiden launch of the Miura 5 to be conducted at Guiana 21 5 Launch schedule editAs of December 2023 the first test flight of Miura 5 is expected to take place sometime in early 2026 2 The initial model which is planned to be used for the first two flights will be entirely expendable It will be superseded by an improved model of the Miura 5 that uses the recoverable first stage which is intended to perform the planned commercial launches 8 See also editMiura 1 Suborbital recoverable launch vehicle of the Spanish company PLD Space PLD Space Private Spanish launch services provider List of orbital launch systems Zero 2 Infinity Private Spanish company developing high altitude balloons Capricornio rocket Spanish orbital launch vehicle Themis programme European Space Agency programmeReferences edit a b c d e f RaulTorresPLD 18 January 2022 Thread Happy to give you accurate MIURA5 figures maximum payload mass to reference mission 500km SSO 450kg Maximum payload to orbit 900kg equatorial launch Launch site is CSG in French Guiana Tweet via Twitter a b c Pinedo Emma 20 October 2023 Spain s PLD Space expects first orbital launch in Q1 2026 from French Guiana Reuters Retrieved 5 December 2023 a b Gallego Pablo August 2020 MIURA 5 The European and Reusable Microlauncher for CubeSats and Small Satellites Small Satellite Conference a b c PLD Space after ESA input doubles lift capacity of smallsat launcher spacenews com 28 November 2018 a b Pons Juan 23 October 2023 PLD wants its Miura 5 rocket to take off from French Guiana in early 2026 atalayar com Young Chris 12 October 2023 Spain rocket launch could be turning point for European spaceflight interestingengineering com RaulTorresPLD 29 August 2021 Comenzaremos la fabricacion del primer MIURA5 pero por supuesto necesitamos que vuele MIURA1 para validar y transferir muchas tecnologias Otras como los motores TEPREL C o los tanques de propelente son nuevas Esperamos tener a principios del proximo ano hardware de ensayo Tweet in Spanish via Twitter a b c d e f Sanmiguel Pablo Gallego March 2022 PLD Space Secures The Next Steps for the MIURA Launches satmagazine com Duboust Oceane 7 April 2023 SpaceX competitor A Spanish start up is ready to launch Europe s first reusable rocket euronews com MIURA 1 Payload User s guide PDF Payload Aerospace S L 13 November 2018 p 10 Archived PDF from the original on 7 October 2023 Retrieved 2 January 2024 a b c Henry Caleb 11 June 2018 PLD Space raises additional 10 million for reusable smallsat launchers spacenews com Retrieved 3 March 2019 ESA Microlaunch Services Workshop Presentation PDF 6 November 2018 Dickinson David 12 June 2023 Startup PLD Space to Launch Europe s First Reusable Rocket universetoday com Marin Daniel 2 November 2016 PLD Space el primer cohete reutilizable europeo PLD Space the first European reusable rocket naukas com in Spanish Since today MIURA is the new PLD Space rocket s commercial brand Press release PLD Space 13 November 2018 Archived from the original on 2 February 2020 Retrieved 3 March 2019 info space com 15 April 2019 PLD Space and the Spanish Army pass the first drop test of Miura 5 Info Space News Spain infoespacial com Retrieved 2 August 2020 Sheldon John 17 April 2019 Spain s PLD Space Successfully Completes Miura 5 Reusable Booster Drop Test spacewatch global Reusability Drop test of microlauncher s demonstration first stage European Space Agency 15 April 2019 PLD Space 1 July 2019 Today PLD Space and CNES and with the support of CDTIoficial signed at EUCASS2019 a preliminary Agreement to Tweet via Twitter Teniente general Jose Maria Salom director general del INTA Noticias Defensa En abierto defensa com 14 April 2019 a b Garay Jon 9 October 2023 As Spain enters the space race this is the successor to the Miura 1 rocket that will be three times taller and thirty times more powerful surinenglish com External links editOfficial Miura 5 product website nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to PLD Space Portal nbsp Spaceflight Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Miura 5 amp oldid 1225478644, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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