Universal Rocket Module

URM-1
Manufacturer Khrunichev
Country of origin Russia
Used on Angara stage 1 and boosters
General characteristics
Height 25.7 metres (84 ft)
Diameter 2.9 metres (9 ft 6 in)
Gross mass 142,400 kilograms (313,900 lb)
Propellant mass 132,600 kilograms (292,300 lb)
Engine details
Engines 1 RD-191
Thrust
Specific impulse 311 sec (sea level)
Burn time 214s (Booster or Angara 1.2)
325s (Core)
Fuel LOX/Kerosene
URM-2
Manufacturer Khrunichev
Country of origin Russia
Used on Angara 5 stage 2
General characteristics
Height 6.9 metres (23 ft)
Diameter 3.6 metres (12 ft)
Propellant mass 36,000 kilograms (79,000 lb)
Engine details
Engines 1 RD-0124A
Thrust 294 kilonewtons (66,000 lbf) (sea level)
Specific impulse 359 sec
Burn time 424s
Fuel LOX/Kerosene


Universal Rocket Module (URM) is the name of the modular liquid fuelled first and second stage of the Angara expendable launch system. The first stage and booster variant is referred to as URM-1, while the second stage is referred to as URM-2. The URM-2 is derived from the Soyuz-2 Block I second stage.[1]

URM-1 is a unitary structure 2.9 meters in diameter and 25 meters in length that includes an oxidizer tank, a fuel tank (both tanks being coupled by a spacer) and an RD-191 engine burning RP-1 fuel with liquid oxygen producing a thrust of 1.92 MN.[2] URM-1 was first flown in 2014 on the Angara 1.2PP suborbital test flight. Angara can fly with either one URM-1 in the case of Angara 1.2 and Angara 1.2PP, or one URM-1 as a sustainer core with four additional URM-1s as boosters for Angara A5.[1]

URM-2 is a modified Block I stage, 3.6 meters in diameter and 6.9 meters in length. It is powered by a single RD-0124A producing 294 kilonewtons, derived from Block I's RD-0124. URM-2 was first flight tested on Angara 1.2PP, but will fly in operation only on the Angara A5. The operational Angara 1.2 will also use a modified Block I powered by the RD-0124A as a second stage, though this stage will have a diameter of no more than 2.9 meters.[3]

The Naro-1 launch vehicle was based on the URM-1 with a reduced thrust RD-191, called RD-151, combined with a solid-fueled second stage built by Republic of Korea KARI.

See also

External links

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Angara A5". Spaceflight 101. Retrieved July 2014.
  2. http://www.khrunichev.ru/main.php?id=44
  3. Zak, Anatoly. "Angara-1". RussianSpaceWeb. Retrieved July 2014.