Suborbital spaceflight in 2008

A number of Suborbital spaceflights were conducted during 2008. These consist mostly of sounding rocket missions and missile tests, and include other flights such as an ASAT firing. Between the start of the year and 16 July, at least 43 publicly announced suborbital spaceflights were conducted, the first of them on 11 January.

January

LIDOS

LIDOS was an American ultraviolet astronomy mission, conducted using a Canadian Black Brant IX, serial number 36.243, launched from LC-36 at the White Sands Missile Range. The launch occurred at 05:32 GMT on 11 January, making it the first recorded spaceflight launch of 2008. The mission was conducted by NASA for Johns Hopkins University, and reached an apogee of 315 kilometres. It was declared a success.[1]

Jericho-3 test launch

On 17 January, the Israeli Air Force was reported to have successfully launched the first Jericho-3 missile from Palmachim, on a test flight.[2]

SCIFER-2

SCIFER-2 (Sounding of the Cusp Ion Fountain Energization Region-2) was an American ionospheric and auroral research mission, launched from the Andøya Rocket Range in Norway. It was conducted by NASA using Black Brant XII 40.021. Research was conducted by Cornell University with Professor Paul Kintner as Principal Investigator, the Lynch Rocket Laboratory at Dartmouth College, and the Magnetosphere-Ionosphere Research Laboratory at the University of New Hampshire. Launch was delayed several times by high winds and poor scientific conditions, and finally occurred on 18 January at 07:30 GMT. The rocket reached an apogee of 1,460 kilometres during a successful flight.[3]

Shaheen-1 test launch

On 25 January, a Shaheen-1 missile was test fired from Sonmiani by the Army of Pakistan. The test was declared a success.[4]

HotPay-2

The Norwegian HotPay-2 ionospheric and auroral research mission was launched from Andøya at 19:14:00 GMT on 31 January. The mission was conducted by Andøya Rocket Range (ARR) on behalf of the EU's Framework Programme for Research and Technological Development, FP6. The Principal Investigator for the mission was Professor John Plane from the University of Leeds. The HotPay-2 payload, built by ARR contained instruments from School of Chemistry at University of Leeds (UK), Sodankyla Observatory (Finland), University of Stockholm (Sweden), Dartmouth College (US), Graz Technical University (Austria), Technical University of Kosice (Slovakia) and Bulgarian Academy of Sciences (Bulgaria). The successful research flight was conducted using a two-stage (VS-30/Orion) sounding rocket, which reached an apogee of 380.6 kilometres.[5]

Standard Missile test

On 28 January, Boeing, Lockheed Martin and the United States Navy announced that a test launch of a Standard Missile 3, on an undisclosed date in the previous month had been conducted successfully. The launch occurred from the USS Desert Ship, a US Navy base at the White Sands Missile Range.[6]

February

Kavoshgar-1

On 4 February, Iran conducted its second sounding rocket launch, and the maiden flight of the Kavoshgar-1 rocket, a derivative of the Shahab-3 missile. The launch occurred from a new space centre in Semnan Province. It is believed that the launch was a test of the Kavoshgar, which was being developed as a carrier rocket.

S-310 Ionosphere research mission

On 6 February at 09:14:40 GMT, JAXA launched an S-310 rocket from the Uchinoura Space Centre in Japan. The rocket was used to conduct research into the ionosphere.

TEXUS-44

TEXUS-44 was the 44th flight of the European TEXUS microgravity research programme. It was launched from Esrange in Sweden at 11:30 UTC on 7 February. A Brazillian VSB-30 sounding rocket was used, and the launch was conducted by the German Aerospace Centre (DLR) and the Swedish Space Corporation.

USA-193 intercept

At 03:26 GMT on 21 February, a modified Standard Missile 3 was launched from the USS Lake Erie, stationed in the Pacific Ocean. The missile was fired at USA-193, a reconnaissance satellite which failed shortly after launch in December 2006. Acting as an anti-satellite weapon, the SM-3 was successful in destroying the satellite, by rupturing its hydrazine tank. Officially, the United States Government stated that they destroyed the satellite to prevent it falling over a populated area, however it was claimed that there were political motivations, such as proving that the United States had the capability to destroy a satellite in low Earth orbit, or to prevent the satellite from falling into the wrong hands, should it come down in a country not allied to the United States.

TEXUS-45

TEXUS-45, the 45th TEXUS microgravity research mission, was launched from Esrange in Sweden at 06:15 GMT on 21 February. A Brazillian VSB-30 rocket was used for the mission, which was conducted by the German Aerospace Centre (DLR) and the Swedish Space Corporation on behalf of the European Space Agency.

K-15 Test

On 26 February, at 07:28 GMT, India test-fired a K-15 submarine-launched ballistic missile (SLBM) from the INS Kalinga, in the first K-15 test launch to be conducted underwater.

March

Agni-1 missile test

At 04:45 GMT on 23 March, the Indian Navy test fired an Agni-1 missile from Launch Complex 4 at Wheeler Island.

Mini-DUSTY 14

Mini-DUSTY 14 was a microgravity research mission launched on 28 March using an Indian RH-200 sounding rocket. The launch and mission were conducted by Andøya Rocket Range, and the launch occurred from their facilities in Norway.

April

GT-196GM

Glory Trip 196GM (GT-196GM) was the first test of a Minuteman III missile to be conducted for nearly a year, due to a series of delays. The launch, from LF-09 at the Vandenberg Air Force Base occurred at 08:01 GMT on 2 April. It was conducted by the United States Air Force.

SEE

SEE was an Ultraviolet Astronomy mission launched from LC-36 at the White Sands Missile Range, using a Black Brant IX rocket. The serial number of the rocket was 36.240. Launch occurred at 16:58 GMT on 14 April. The launch was conducted by NASA for the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics of the University of Colorado.

Blue Sparrow test

On 15 April, an Israeli Blue Sparrow missile was test launched. The missile was fired from an F-15 aircraft, and flew a trajectory designed to imitate that flown by Iranian Shahab missiles. Later launches will be used to test Arrow missiles, designed to shoot down enemy missiles.

Shaheen-II tests

On 19 and 21 April, two Pakistani Shaheen-II missiles were launched from an undisclosed launch site, believed to be Sonmiani.

May

Black Brant X-ray astronomy mission

At 05:30 GMT on 1 May a Black Brant IX, serial number 36.223 was launched by NASA, from LC-36 at the White Sands Missile Range, on an x-ray astronomy mission for the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

First Mesquito launch

On 6 May, between 18:00 and 20:00 UTC, the maiden flight of the Mesquito rocket, serial number 12.065, was conducted by NASA from LC-2 at the Wallops Flight Facility. The flight was reported to be successful.

Agni-III test launch

An Indian Agni-III missile was launched on a test mission from LC-4 at Wheeler Island, at 04:26 on 7 May. The test was reported to be successful.

Second Mesquito launch

About 24 hours after the maiden flight, the second Mesquito, 12.066, was launched from the same launch pad at the Wallops Flight Facility. The launch occurred early in the launch window, and was reported to have failed, due to a loss of control shortly after burnout of the solid rocket motor, and the loss of stabilisation fins during descent.

Trident test launches

On 21 May Lockheed Martin announced that two Trident II missiles had been tested successfully earlier in the month. The launches were claimed to have broken a record for consecutive successful launches, with 122 such launches since 1989. Trident launches are typically conducted in pairs on the same day. The missiles were fired from the submarine USS Nebraska, submerged in the Pacific Ocean. The launches were later reported to have occurred on 8 May.

MASER-11

Maser 11 was a European sounding rocket mission, launched by a VSB-30 rocket at 04:00 GMT on 15 May. The launch occurred from Esrange in Sweden, was conducted by the Swedish Space Corporation, and reached an apogee of 252 kilometres.[7]

GT-197GM

Glory Trip 197GM (GT-197GM) was the second test of a Minuteman III missile to be conducted in 2008. The launch, from LF-10 at Vandenberg AFB occurred at 10:04 UTC on 22 May. It was conducted by the 576th Flight Test Squadron of the USAF Space Command. The flight was a long range test aimed at Guam, approximately 8450 kilometres from the launch site, rather than the usual target, Kwajalein Atoll. Instrumentation was carried for the US National Nuclear Security Administration. The test was reported to have been successful.[8]

Prithvi test

A Prithvi missile was launched by the Indian Army from the Integrated Test Range, at 05:00 UTC on 23 May, as part of a user training and test flight programme.

Tszyuylan-2 test flight

A Tszyuylan-2 missile was launched from the Chinese Navy's sole Soviet-designed Golf class submarine, located in the Yellow Sea, on 29 May.

June

AEGIS SM-2 test

A test of the terminal intercept capability of the United States AEGIS missile defence system was conducted on 5 June . A Thread-Representative Short Range Ballistic Missile was launched from the USS Tripoli, near Kauai. The missile reached space, and was intercepted by two SM-2 missiles launched from a destroyer, after re-entry. The SM-2 missiles did not reach space.

Simulated AEGIS test

A further test of the AEGIS system was conducted on 13 June, when two Medium Range Target Missiles were launched from Barking Sands. The missiles were tracked by US Navy destroyers, and simulated SM-3 missiles were launched to intercept them.

THAAD test

On 26 June, the United States conducted its third ABM test of the month, when a THAAD missile was used to intercept a Threat Representative Ballistic Missile. The TRBM was launched from a C-17 Globemaster III aircraft, flying over the Pacific Ocean, at 02:16 GMT. A THAAD missile was launched from the Kwajalein Missile Range at 02:22, and the missile was successfully intercepted, during the stage at which the mock warhead separated from the missile. The THAAD did not leave the atmosphere, however the target did.

NGSP-01

A Black Brant XI was used to conduct the Next Generation Sensor Producibility (NGSP-01) technology development mission for the US MDA. The rocket was launched from Wallops Island at 19:57 GMT on 26 June. The payload used infrared and optical sensors to track a number of objects released from the sounding rocket.

ECOMA 2008-1

The first of three ECOMA aeronomy research missions to be conducted in 2008 was launched from the Andøya Rocket Range on 30 June. A Nike-Orion rocket was used.

July

ECOMA 2008-2

The second ECOMA mission was launched at 21:30 UTC on 7 July. The mission used a Nike-Orion rocket launched from Andøya, to study Aeronomy. The mission was flown by ARR and DLR.

Great Prophet III

Main article: Great Prophet III

Iran conducted the Great Prophet III war games during July. These included a number of missile launches, several of which made suborbital spaceflights. Nine missiles were launched on 9 July, including a Shahab-3. Further launches, including another Shahab-3, were reported to have occurred on 10 July.

ECOMA 2008-3

2008's third and final ECOMA Aeronomy mission was launched from Andøya atop a Nike-Orion at 10:46 GMT on 12 July. It reached an apogee of 123 kilometres (76 mi).[9]

SubTEC-II

SubTEC-II, a technology development flight, was launched from Wallops Flight Facility on 14 July at 10:10 UTC. A Terrier 70-Improved Orion sounding rocket was used, a derivative of the Terrier-Orion. The mission was reported to have been successful.[10]

FTX-03

FTX-03 was a missile defence test, conducted on 18 July by the US Air Force and MDA. A Polaris missile, in the STARS configuration, was launched from Kodiak Island at 22:47 GMT.[11] It was tracked by land and sea based radar systems, and the US early warning satellite systems. Intercepts of the missile by SM-3 and THAAD missiles were simulated from ships in the Pacific Ocean, and ground based systems at Vandenberg Air Force Base, respectively. The test was successful.[12]

August

Russian SLBM test

A Russian SLBM test was conducted from the submarine Ryazan, located in the Barents Sea, on 1 August. The test was reported to have been successful. While the type of missile was not officially confirmed, Ryazan is believed to carry only R-29 missiles.

S-520 microgravity research flight

JAXA launched an S-520 from the Uchinoura Space Centre on 2 August at 08:30 UTC. The rocket conducted microgravity research, and reached an apogee of 293 kilometres.

GT-195GM

A Minuteman III missile was launched from Vandenberg AFB at 08:01 UTC on 13 August, on a test flight aimed at Kwajalein Atoll. The test was successful, and the missile travelled about 6,790 kilometres downrange, deploying three re-entry vehicles.

ALV X-1

Main article: ALV X-1

The ALV X-1 test flight of the ATK Launch Vehicle was launched from LP-0B at the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport, Wallops Island, at 09:10 GMT on 22 August. 27 seconds after launch, the flight ended in failure, when the rocket exploded.

Trident missile tests

The US Navy launched two Trident II missiles from the USS Louisiana in the Pacific Ocean on 25 August.[13] The launches were part of the missile's operational test programme, and were both successful.

Topol test

On 28 August the Russian military launched a test flight of the Topol-M missile from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome. The test was reported to have been successful.[14]

September

Double THAAD test

The US military intended to conduct a test of the THAAD anti-ballistic missile system on 18 September, launching two missiles against a single target. The target was launched from Kauai at 02:05 GMT, but failed before the interceptors could be launched. Both THAAD launches were cancelled.[15]

Bulava test

On 18 September the Russian Navy test fired a Bulava SLBM from the Dmitry Donskoi submarine in the White Sea. The missile was launched at 14:45 GMT, and impacted the test site at 15:05.[16]

NFIRE-2b

A missile test using the NFIRE satellite to observe the launch was conducted on 24 September. Orbital Sciences Corporation launched a Chimera test vehicle from Vandenberg AFB at 06:57, on behalf of the US military. The missile passed close to the NFIRE satellite, before falling back to Earth.[17]

October

Russian missile tests

On 11 and 12 November, Russia conducted four missile tests in the space of two days. On 11 November, an R-29RMU Sineva missile was launched from the submarine Tula (K-114), in the Barents Sea. The next day, an RS-12M Topol was launched from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome at 07:24 UTC. At an undisclosed time on the same day as the Topol, an R-29 Vysota and an R-29RM Shtil were launched from submarines. The R-29 was launched from the Zelenograd (K-506), in the Sea of Okhotsk, while the R-29RM was launched from the Yekaterinburg (K-84), in the Barents Sea. All four tests were reported to have been successful.

Black Brant UV astronomy mission

On 20 October at 08:39 UTC, a Black Brant IX was launched from LC-36 at the White Sands Missile Range, to conduct an ultraviolet astronomy mission for NASA and the US Navy Research Laboratory. The flight lasted about ten minutes, and was successful.

UR-100 test

A UR-100N missile was successfully test-launched from the Baikonur Cosmodrome by the Russian Strategic Rocket Forces on 22 October at 09:10 UTC.

REXUS-4

REXUS-4 was a student microgravity flight, launched from Esrange at 12:30 UTC on 22 October part of the REXUS programme. A Nike-Orion rocket was used. The flight was conducted by the Swedish Space Corporation and German Aerospace Centre, and the launch was conducted by EuroLaunch. The rocket reached an apogee of 175 kilometres.

November

Pacific Blitz

On 1 November, the US Navy conducted two tests of the AEGIS missile defence system as part of the Pacific Blitz naval exercise. Two target missiles were launched from the Pacific Missile Range Facility at Barking Sands. SM-3 interceptors were launched from the USS Paul Hamilton and USS Hopper. The missile launched from the Paul Hamilton successfully intercepted its target, however the one launched from the Hopper failed to do so, due to a targeting fault.

GT-198GM

GT-198GM was the fourth test of a Minuteman III missile to be conducted in 2008. The missile was launched from Vandenberg AFB at 09:00 UTC on 5 November. The missile travelled 6,740 kilometres downrange, and successfully impacted Kwajalein Atoll.

Shaurya test

At 05:56 UTC on 12 November, an Indian Shaurya missile was launched on a successful test flight from LC-4 at the Integrated Test Range on Wheeler Island.

Sejjil test

Iran tested a new solid-fuelled missile, named Sejjil, on 12 November. The test was reported to have been successful.

M51 test

At 09:06 UTC on 13 November, the French Force Océanique Stratégique conducted a successful test flight of the M51 SLBM from the Centre d'Essais des Landes at Biscarosse.

Black Brant solar mission

On 14 November, a Black Brant IX was launched from LC-36 at the White Sands Missile Range on a Solar research mission for NASA and the US Navy Research Laboratory.

Japanese AEGIS test

The Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force conducted a test of the AEGIS missile defence system, in conjunction with the US Navy and MDA. At 02:21 on 20 November, a target missile was launched from the Pacific Missile Range Facility at Barking Sands, by the US Navy. Three minutes later, an SM-3 interceptor was launched from the JDS Chōkai. The SM-3 failed to intercept the target due to an infrared sensor fault. It was the second consecutive failure of an AEGIS test, following a similar malfunction during the US Navy test on 1 November.

RS-24 test

At 13:24 on 26 November, Russia successfully test-fired its third RS-24 ICBM from the Plesetsk Cosmodrome.

Kavoshgar-2

On 26 November, Iran launched the Kavoshgar-2 research flight. Some sources reported that a Safir was used, whilst images of the launch showed a smaller, solid-fuelled rocket. It is unclear whether the reports or the images were correct. The flight was reported to have lasted 40 minutes, with the payload being recovered by parachute.

Bulava test flight

An RSM-56 Bulava was tested on 28 November, with launch occurring from the Dmitry Donskoi submarine in the White Sea. The flight was reported to have been successful.

December

ICI-2

On 5 December, a VS-30-Orion was launched from SvalRak in Svalbard, on an Auroral research flight for the University of Oslo. Launch occurred at 10:35:10 UTC, and the rocket reached an apogee of 330 kilometres during its ten-minute flight, which was reported to have been successful.

FTG-05

FTG-05 was an American missile defence test which took place on 5 December. A Polaris missile, in the STARS configuration was launched as a target from Kodiak Launch Complex at 20:04 UTC, and a Ground Based Interceptor carrying an Exoatmospheric Kill Vehicle was launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base at 20:21. At 20:29, the interceptor destroyed the target, completing the successful test.

Failed Bulava test

An RSM-56 Bulava was tested on 23 December at 03:00 UTC. The missile was launched from the Dmitry Donskoi submarine in the White Sea. The missile went off course after one of the stage separation events, and self-destructed. This was the fifth reported failure of a Bulava out of ten test flights.

See also


References

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  2. "Nuke-capable missile test-launched by Israel". The Seattle Times. 2008-01-18. Retrieved 2008-05-14.
  3. "40.021 UE KINTNER/CORNELL UNIVERSITY". NASA Sounding Rockets Office. 2008-01-18. Retrieved 2008-05-14.
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  13. Fisher, Lynn (2008-08-26). "Lockheed Martin-Built Trident II D5 Missile Achieves 124 Successful Test Launches In A Row". Lockheed Martin. Retrieved 2008-10-21.
  14. Baldwin, Chris (2008-08-28). "Russia long-range missile test a success". Reuters. Retrieved 2008-10-21.
  15. "Missile Defense Test Conducted" (pdf). Missile Defense Agency. 2008-09-17. Retrieved 2008-10-21.
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  17. Geoffroy, Lt. Raymond (2008-09-24). "Vandenberg supports missile defense tracking test". 30th Space Wing Public Affairs. US Air Force. Retrieved 2008-10-21.