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Centaur (rocket stage)

Centaur III
A single-engine Centaur III being raised for mating to an Atlas V rocket
ManufacturerUnited Launch Alliance
Used on
Current
Atlas V: Centaur III
Vulcan: Centaur V
Historical
Atlas-Centaur
Saturn I
Titan III
Titan IV
Atlas II
Atlas III
Shuttle-Centaur(not flown)
General characteristics
Height12.68 m (499 in)[1]
Diameter3.05 m (120 in)
Propellant mass20,830 kg (45,920 lb)
Empty mass2,247 kg (4,954 lb), single engine
2,462 kg (5,428 lb), dual engine
Centaur III
Powered by1 or 2 RL10
Maximum thrust99.2 kN (22,300 lbf), per engine
Specific impulse450.5 seconds (4.418 km/s)
Burn timeVariable
PropellantLH2 / LOX
Associated stages
DerivativesCentaur V
Advanced Cryogenic Evolved Stage
Launch history
StatusActive
Total launches271 as of January 2024[2]
First flightMay 9, 1962; 62 years ago (May 9, 1962)
A Dual Engine Centaur (DEC) stage

The Centaur is a family of rocket propelled upper stages that has been in use since 1962. It is currently produced by U.S. launch service provider United Launch Alliance, with one main active version and one version under development. The 3.05 m (10.0 ft) diameter Common Centaur/Centaur III flies as the upper stage of the Atlas V launch vehicle, and the 5.4 m (18 ft) diameter Centaur V has been developed as the upper stage of ULA's new Vulcan rocket.[3][4] Centaur was the first rocket stage to use liquid hydrogen (LH2) and liquid oxygen (LOX) propellants, a high-energy combination that is ideal for upper stages but has significant handling difficulties.[5]

Characteristics

Common Centaur is built around stainless steel pressure stabilized balloon propellant tanks[6] with 0.51 mm (0.020 in) thick walls. It can lift payloads of up to 19,000 kg (42,000 lb).[7] The thin walls minimize the mass of the tanks, maximizing the stage's overall performance.[8]

A common bulkhead separates the LOX and LH2 tanks, further reducing the tank mass. It is made of two stainless steel skins separated by a fiberglass honeycomb. The fiberglass honeycomb minimizes heat transfer between the extremely cold LH2 and less cold LOX.[9]: 19 

The main propulsion system consists of one or two Aerojet Rocketdyne RL10 engines.[6] The stage is capable of up to twelve restarts, limited by propellant, orbital lifetime, and mission requirements. Combined with the insulation of the propellant tanks, this allows Centaur to perform the multi-hour coasts and multiple engine burns required on complex orbital insertions.[7]

The reaction control system (RCS) also provides ullage and consists of twenty hydrazine monopropellant engines located around the stage in two 2-thruster pods and four 4-thruster pods. For propellant, 150 kg (340 lb) of Hydrazine is stored in a pair of bladder tanks and fed to the RCS engines with pressurized helium gas, which is also used to accomplish some main engine functions.[10]

Current versions

As of 2019, all but two of the many Centaur variants had been retired: Common Centaur/Centaur III (active) and Centaur V (flight proven).[11][12]

Current engines

Each Centaur stage uses two engines. The engines have evolved over time, and three versions are in use as of 2024 (see table below). All versions utilize liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen.

Version Stage used on Dry mass Thrust Isp, vac. Length Diameter Notes
RL10A-4-2 Centaur III 168 kg (370 lb) 99.1 kN (22,300 lbf) 451 s 1.17 m (3.8 ft) [13][14]
RL10C-1 Centaur III (SEC), (DCSS) 190 kg (420 lb) 101.8 kN (22,900 lbf) 449.7 s 2.12 m (7.0 ft) 1.45 m (4.8 ft) [15][16][17][14]
RL10C-1-1 Centaur V 188 kg (414 lb) 106 kN (24,000 lbf) 453.8 s 2.46 m (8.1 ft) 1.57 m (5.2 ft) [18]

Centaur III/Common Centaur

Centaur lifted onto the first stage of a Atlas V

Common Centaur is the upper stage of the Atlas V rocket.[10] Earlier Common Centaurs were propelled by the RL10-A-4-2 version of the RL-10. Since 2014, Common Centaur has flown with the RL10-C-1 engine, which is shared with the Delta Cryogenic Second Stage, to reduce costs.[19][20] The Dual Engine Centaur (DEC) configuration will continue to use the smaller RL10-A-4-2 to accommodate two engines in the available space.[20]

The Atlas V can fly in multiple configurations, but only one affects the way Centaur integrates with the booster and fairing: the 5.4 m (18 ft) diameter Atlas V payload fairing attaches to the booster and encapsulates the upper stage and payload, routing fairing-induced aerodynamic loads into the booster. If the 4 m (13 ft) diameter payload fairing is used, the attachment point is at the top (forward end) of Centaur, routing loads through the Centaur tank structure.[21]

The latest Common Centaurs can accommodate secondary payloads using an Aft Bulkhead Carrier attached to the engine end of the stage.[22]

Single Engine Centaur (SEC)

Most payloads launch on Single Engine Centaur (SEC) with one RL10. This is the variant for all normal flights of the Atlas V (indicated by the last digit of the naming system, for example Atlas V 421).

Dual Engine Centaur (DEC)

A dual engine variant with two RL-10 engines is available, but only for launching the CST-100 Starliner crewed spacecraft. The higher thrust of two engines allows a gentler ascent with more horizontal velocity and less vertical velocity, which reduces deceleration to survivable levels in the event of a launch abort and ballistic reentry occurring at any point in the flight.[23]

Centaur V

Centaur V is the upper stage of the new Vulcan launch vehicle developed by the United Launch Alliance to meet the needs of the National Security Space Launch (NSSL) program.[24] Vulcan was initially intended to enter service with an upgraded variant of the Common Centaur,[25] with an upgrade to the Advanced Cryogenic Evolved Stage (ACES) planned after the first few years of flights.[12][26]

In late 2017, ULA decided to bring elements of the ACES upper stage forward and begin work on Centaur V. Centaur V will have ACES' 5.4 m (18 ft) diameter and advanced insulation, but does not include the Integrated Vehicle Fluids (IVF) feature expected to allow the extension of upper stage on-orbit life from hours to weeks.[12] Centaur V uses two different versions of the RL10-C engine with nozzle extensions to improve the fuel consumption for the heaviest payloads.[27] This increased capability over Common Centaur was intended to permit ULA to meet NSSL requirements and retire both the Atlas V and Delta IV Heavy rocket families earlier than initially planned. The new rocket publicly became the Vulcan Centaur in March 2018.[28][29] In May 2018, the Aerojet Rocketdyne RL10 was announced as Centaur V's engine following a competitive procurement process against the Blue Origin BE-3. Each stage will mount two engines.[30] In September 2020, ULA announced that ACES was no longer being developed, and that Centaur V would be used instead.[31] Tory Bruno, ULA's CEO, stated that the Vulcan's Centaur 5 will have 40% more endurance and two and a half times more energy than the upper stage ULA currently flies. “But that’s just the tip of the iceberg,” Bruno elaborated. “I’m going to be pushing up to 450, 500, 600 times the endurance over just the next handful of years. That will enable a whole new set of missions that you cannot even imagine doing today.”[32]

Vulcan finally launched on 8 January 2024 and the stage performed flawlessly on its maiden flight.[33]

History

Centaur stage during assembly at General Dynamics,[34] 1962
Diagram of the Centaur stage tank

The Centaur concept originated in 1956 when Convair began studying a liquid hydrogen fueled upper stage. The ensuing project began in 1958 as a joint venture among Convair, the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA), and the U.S. Air Force. In 1959, NASA assumed ARPA's role. Centaur initially flew as the upper stage of the Atlas-Centaur launch vehicle, encountering a number of early developmental issues due to the pioneering nature of the effort and the use of liquid hydrogen.[35] In 1994 General Dynamics sold their Space Systems division to Lockheed-Martin.[36]

Centaur A-D (Atlas)

An Atlas-Centaur rocket (Centaur A-D stage) launches Surveyor 1

The Centaur was originally developed for use with the Atlas launch vehicle family. Known in early planning as the 'high-energy upper stage', the choice of the mythological Centaur as a namesake was intended to represent the combination of the brute force of the Atlas booster and finesse of the upper stage.[37]

Initial Atlas-Centaur launches used developmental versions, labeled Centaur-A through -C. The only Centaur-A launch on 8 May 1962 ended in an explosion 54 seconds after liftoff when insulation panels on the Centaur separated early, causing the LH2 tank to overheat and rupture. After extensive redesigns, the only Centaur-B flight on 26 November 1963 was successful. Centaur-C flew three times with two failures and one launch declared successful although the Centaur failed to restart. Centaur-D was the first version to enter operational service, with fifty-six launches.[38]

On 30 May 1966, an Atlas-Centaur boosted the first Surveyor lander towards the Moon. This was followed by six more Surveyor launches over the next two years, with the Atlas-Centaur performing as expected. The Surveyor program demonstrated the feasibility of reigniting a hydrogen engine in space and provided information on the behavior of LH2 in space.[9]: 96 

By the 1970s, Centaur was fully mature and had become the standard rocket stage for launching larger civilian payloads into high Earth orbit, also replacing the Atlas-Agena vehicle for NASA planetary probes.[9]: 103–166 

By the end of 1989, Centaur-D and -G had been used as the upper stage for 63 Atlas rocket launches, 55 of which were successful.[2]

Saturn I S-V

A Saturn I launches with a ballasted S-V stage

The Saturn I was designed to fly with a S-V third stage to enable payloads to go beyond low Earth orbit (LEO). The S-V stage was intended to be powered by two RL-10A-1 engines burning liquid hydrogen as fuel and liquid oxygen as oxidizer. The S-V stage was flown four times on missions SA-1 through SA-4, all four of these missions had the S-V's tanks filled with water to be used a ballast during launch. The stage was not flown in an active configuration.

Centaur D-1T (Titan III)

A Titan IIIE-Centaur rocket (Centaur D-1T stage) launches Voyager 2

The Centaur D was improved for use on the far more powerful Titan III booster in the 1970s, with the first launch of the resulting Titan IIIE in 1974. The Titan IIIE more than tripled the payload capacity of Atlas-Centaur, and incorporated improved thermal insulation, allowing an orbital lifespan of up to five hours, an increase over the 30 minutes of the Atlas-Centaur.[9]: 143 

The first launch of Titan IIIE in February 1974 was unsuccessful, with the loss of the Space Plasma High Voltage Experiment (SPHINX) and a mockup of the Viking probe. It was eventually determined that Centaur's engines had ingested an incorrectly installed clip from the oxygen tank.[9]: 145–146 

The next Titan-Centaurs launched Helios 1, Viking 1, Viking 2, Helios 2,[39] Voyager 1, and Voyager 2. The Titan booster used to launch Voyager 1 had a hardware problem that caused a premature shutdown, which the Centaur stage detected and successfully compensated for. Centaur ended its burn with less than 4 seconds of fuel remaining.[9]: 160 

Centaur (Atlas G)

Centaur was introduced on the Atlas G and was carried over to the very similar Atlas I.[citation needed]

Shuttle-Centaur (Centaur G and G-Prime)

Illustration of Shuttle-Centaur G-Prime with Ulysses

Shuttle-Centaur was a proposed Space Shuttle upper stage. To enable its installation in shuttle payload bays, the diameter of the Centaur's hydrogen tank was increased to 4.3 m (14 ft), with the LOX tank diameter remaining at 3.0 m (10 ft). Two variants were proposed: Centaur G Prime, which was planned to launch the Galileo and Ulysses robotic probes, and Centaur G, a shortened version, reduced in length from approximately 9 to 6 m (30 to 20 ft), planned for U.S. DoD payloads and the Magellan Venus probe.[40]

After the Space Shuttle Challenger accident, and just months before the Shuttle-Centaur had been scheduled to fly, NASA concluded that it was too risky to fly the Centaur on the Shuttle.[41] The probes were launched with the much less powerful solid-fueled IUS, with Galileo needing multiple gravitational assists from Venus and Earth to reach Jupiter.

Centaur T (Titan IV)

Centaur-T stage of a Titan IV rocket

The capability gap left by the termination of the Shuttle-Centaur program was filled by a new launch vehicle, the Titan IV. The 401A/B versions used a Centaur upper stage with a 4.3-meter (14 ft) diameter hydrogen tank. In the Titan 401A version, a Centaur-T was launched nine times between 1994 and 1998. The 1997 Cassini-Huygens Saturn probe was the first flight of the Titan 401B, with an additional six launches wrapping up in 2003 including one SRB failure.[42]

Centaur II (Atlas II/III)

Centaur II was initially developed for use on the Atlas II series of rockets.[38] Centaur II also flew on the initial Atlas IIIA launches.[10]

Centaur III/Common Centaur (Atlas III/V)

Atlas IIIB introduced the Common Centaur, a longer and initially dual engine Centaur II.[10]

Atlas V cryogenic fluid management experiments

Most Common Centaurs launched on Atlas V have hundreds to thousands of kilograms of propellants remaining on payload separation. In 2006 these propellants were identified as a possible experimental resource for testing in-space cryogenic fluid management techniques.[43]

In October 2009, the Air Force and United Launch Alliance (ULA) performed an experimental demonstration on the modified Centaur upper stage of DMSP-18 launch to improve "understanding of propellant settling and slosh, pressure control, RL10 chilldown and RL10 two-phase shutdown operations. DMSP-18 was a low mass payload, with approximately 28% (5,400 kg (11,900 lb)) of LH2/LOX propellant remaining after separation. Several on-orbit demonstrations were conducted over 2.4 hours, concluding with a deorbit burn.[44] The initial demonstration was intended to prepare for more-advanced cryogenic fluid management experiments planned under the Centaur-based CRYOTE technology development program in 2012–2014,[45] and will increase the TRL of the Advanced Cryogenic Evolved Stage Centaur successor.[11]

Mishaps

Although Centaur has a long and successful flight history, it has experienced a number of mishaps:

  • April 7, 1966: Centaur did not restart after coast — ullage motors ran out of fuel.[46]
  • May 9, 1971; Centaur guidance failed, destroying itself and the Mariner 8 spacecraft bound for Mars orbit.[47]
  • April 18, 1991: Centaur failed due to particles from the scouring pads used to clean the propellant ducts getting stuck in the turbopump, preventing start-up.[48]
  • August 22, 1992: Centaur failed to restart (icing problem).[49]
  • April 30, 1999: Launch of the USA-143 (Milstar DFS-3m) communications satellite failed when a Centaur database error resulted in uncontrolled roll rate and loss of attitude control, placing the satellite in a useless orbit.[50]
  • June 15, 2007: the engine in the Centaur upper stage of an Atlas V shut down early, leaving its payload — a pair of National Reconnaissance Office ocean surveillance satellites — in a lower than intended orbit.[51] The failure was called "A major disappointment," though later statements claim the spacecraft will still be able to complete their mission.[52] The cause was traced to a stuck-open valve that depleted some of the hydrogen fuel, resulting in the second burn terminating four seconds early.[52] The problem was fixed,[53] and the next flight was nominal.[54]
  • March 23–25, 2018: Atlas V Centaur passivated second stage launched on September 8, 2009, broke up.[55][56]
  • August 30, 2018: Atlas V Centaur passivated second stage launched on September 17, 2014, broke up, creating space debris.[57]
  • April 6, 2019: Atlas V Centaur passivated second stage launched on October 17, 2018, broke up.[58][59]

Centaur III specifications

Source: Atlas V551 specifications, as of 2015.[60]

  • Diameter: 3.05 m (10 ft)
  • Length: 12.68 m (42 ft)
  • Inert mass: 2,247 kg (4,954 lb)
  • Fuel: Liquid hydrogen
  • Oxidizer: Liquid oxygen
  • Fuel and oxidizer mass: 20,830 kg (45,922 lb)
  • Guidance: Inertial
  • Thrust: 99.2 kN (22,300 lbf)
  • Burn time: Variable; e.g., 842 seconds on Atlas V
  • Engine: RL10-C-1
  • Engine length: 2.32 m (7.6 ft)
  • Engine diameter: 1.53 m (5 ft)
  • Engine dry weight: 168 kg (370 lb)
  • Engine start: Restartable
  • Attitude control: 4 27-N thrusters, 8 40-N thrusters

References

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Puteri Indonesia Kalimantan UtaraLogo Puteri IndonesiaPembuatMooryati SoedibyoNegara asal Kalimantan Utara, IndonesiaRilisRilis asli1992 –SekarangPranala luarSitus web Puteri Indonesia Kalimantan Utara merupakan suatu kontes daerah dari provinsi Kalimantan Utara yang akan mewakili pada ajang Puteri Indonesia. Semenjak Kalimantan Utara berdiri menjadi provinsi baru (pemekaran dari provinsi Kalimantan Timur) pada tahun 2012, provinsi ini pertama kali mengikuti kontes Puteri Indonesia p…

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Sil'hooettes – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (October 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) The Virginia Sil'hooettesAlso known asThe SilsOriginUniversity of Virginia: Charlottesville, Virginia, United StatesGenresA cappella, col…

село Завітне Країна  Україна Область Донецька область Район Покровський район Громада Новогродівська міська громада Код КАТОТТГ UA14160170050042011 Облікова картка Завітне  Основні дані Населення 308 Поштовий індекс 85381 Телефонний код +380 623 Географічні дані Географічні коорд…

American baseball player and manager (1905-1978) Baseball player Vic HarrisElander Victor “Vic” Harris, manager, Homestead GraysOutfielder / ManagerBorn: (1905-06-10)June 10, 1905Pensacola, FloridaDied: February 23, 1978(1978-02-23) (aged 72)[1]San Fernando, CaliforniaBatted: LeftThrew: RightNegro leagues debut1922, for the Pittsburgh KeystonesLast Negro leagues appearance1947, for the Homestead GraysNegro leagues[a] statisticsBatting average.303Home …

Service Oriented Infrastructure or SOI provides a system for describing information technology (IT) infrastructure as a service. The underlying principles go back to, among others, Mainframe and LDAP technologies[citation needed]; SOI provides a framework or mindset for making business benefits measurable. Overview A service-oriented infrastructure provides a foundation for IT services. A concept initially developed by Intel discussed three domains for service-orientation: the enterprise…

Armenian Declaration of IndependenceRatified30 May 1918Date effective28 May 1918[1]LocationARF Archives Institute The Armenian Declaration of Independence (Armenian: Հայաստանի Անկախության Հռչակագիր, romanized: Hayastani Ankakhutyan Hrchakagir) is the declaration of independence of the Armenian provinces from the Russian Empire. Armenia was proclaimed independent in Tiflis (present-day Tbilisi) on 28 May 1918.[2][3] The declaration of…

List of Commonwealth realms The insignia of the Grand Cross of the Order of St Michael and St George The New Year Honours 1999 for various Commonwealth realms were announced on 30 December 1998,[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9] to celebrate the year passed and mark the beginning of 1999. The Honours list is a list of people who have been awarded one of the various orders, decorations, and medals of the United Kingdom. Honours are …

John Willard MilnorLahir20 Februari 1931 (umur 92)Orange, New JerseyTempat tinggalAmerikaKebangsaanAmerikaAlmamaterPrinceton UniversityDikenal atasExotic spheresFary–Milnor theoremPenghargaanKompetisi Putnam (1949, 1950) Medali Fields (1962) National Medal of Science (1967) Penghargaan Steele (1982) Penghargaan Wolf (1989) Penghargaan Abel (2011)Karier ilmiahBidangMatematikaInstitusiStony Brook UniversityPembimbing doktoralRalph FoxMahasiswa doktoralTadatoshi Akiba Jon Folkman John Mather…

Not to be confused with Premier Padmini. 2019 Indian filmPremier PadminiDirected byRamesh IndiraScreenplay byRamesh IndiraStory byRamesh IndiraProduced byShruti NaiduStarringJaggeshMadhooSudharaniPramodVivek SimhaHitha ChandrashekarCinematographyAdvaitha GurumurthyEdited byRajendra UrsMusic byArjun JanyaProductioncompaniesShruti Naidu ChitraRelease date 26 April 2019 (2019-04-26) Running time111 minutesCountryIndiaLanguageKannada Premier Padmini is a 2019 Indian Kannada-language c…

Feature in Microsoft Windows The Encrypting File System (EFS) on Microsoft Windows is a feature introduced in version 3.0 of NTFS[1] that provides filesystem-level encryption. The technology enables files to be transparently encrypted to protect confidential data from attackers with physical access to the computer. EFS is available in all versions of Windows except the home versions (see Supported operating systems below) from Windows 2000 onwards.[2] By default, no files are enc…

Elang ikan Madagaskar Haliaeetus vociferoides Dua di Danau Ravelobe, Taman Nasional AnkarafantsikaStatus konservasiTerancam kritisIUCN22695121 TaksonomiKerajaanAnimaliaFilumChordataKelasAvesOrdoAccipitriformesFamiliAccipitridaeGenusHaliaeetusSpesiesHaliaeetus vociferoides Des Murs, 1845 DistribusiRange EndemikMadagaskar lbs Elang ikan Madagaskar (Haliaeetus vociferoides) adalah burung pemangsa besar dalam keluarga Accipitridae yang juga termasuk banyak raptor diurnal lainnya seperti layang-layan…

1989 studio album by AcceptEat the HeatStudio album by AcceptReleased11 May 1989RecordedSeptember 1988–January 1989StudioDierks Studios, Stommeln, Cologne, GermanyGenre Heavy metal glam metal[1] Length53:11LabelRCA/BMG Ariola (Europe)Epic (US)ProducerDieter DierksAccept chronology Russian Roulette(1986) Eat the Heat(1989) Staying a Life(1990) Singles from Eat the Heat Generation ClashReleased: July 1989 (EU) European edition cover Eat the Heat is the eighth studio album by Germ…

1981 studio album by The PretendersPretenders IIStudio album by The PretendersReleased7 August 1981[1]Recorded1980–81StudioWessex Studios (London, England)Pathe Marconi Studios (Paris, France)GenreNew wavepunk rockrockjangle pop[2][3]Length46:11LabelSireProducerChris ThomasThe Pretenders chronology Extended Play(1981) Pretenders II(1981) Learning to Crawl(1984) Singles from Pretenders II Talk of the TownReleased: April 1980 Message of LoveReleased: February 1981…

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