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Tsyklon-3

Soviet / Russian launch vehicle


Summary

Soviet / Russian launch vehicle

FieldValue
nameTsyklon-3 (Tsiklon-3)
functionCarrier rocket
manufacturerYuzhmash
country-originSoviet Union
imageЦиклон-3 і 8К99.JPG
captionTsyklon-3 on display in downtown Dnipro
height39.27 m
diameter3 m
mass189000 kg
stages3
capacities
familyR-36, Tsyklon
comparableDelta II
derivativesTsyklon-4, Cyclone-4M
statusRetired
sitesPlesetsk Cosmodrome LC-32
launches122
success114
fail8
first24 June 1977
last30 January 2009
payloadsTselina
Meteor
Okean
Geo-IK
Strela
typestage
stagenoFirst
name11K69
engines1 RD-261 module (3 RD-250PM engines)
thrust3032 kN
SI301 sec
burntime120 seconds
fuel/ UDMH
typestage
stagenoSecond
name11S692
engines1 RD-262
thrust941 kN
SI318 sec
burntime160 seconds
fuel/ UDMH
typestage
name11S693
stagenoThird
engines1 RD-861
thrust78.7 kN
SI317 sec
burntime125 seconds
fuel/ UDMH

|country-origin = Soviet Union

Meteor Okean Geo-IK Strela

The Tsyklon-3, also known as Tsiklon-3 and Cyclone-3 (known as SL-14 by the United States DoD), GRAU index 11K68, was a Soviet, and subsequently Ukrainian orbital carrier rocket.

Overview

thumb|Tsyklon-3 launching a [[Meteor (satellite)|Meteor-3]] satellite at [[Plesetsk Cosmodrome]] in August 1991|left A derivative of the R-36 ICBM, and a member of the Tsyklon family, Tsyklon-3 made its maiden flight on 24 June 1977, and was retired on 30 January 2009. The Ukrainian-built Tsyklon rockets were retired in favour of future all-Russian carrier rockets, such as the Angara, and because they were fuelled by toxic hypergolic propellants.{{cite web |script-title = ru: APMC - Космические войска обеспечили реальность сроков сдачи в эксплуатацию перспективного РКК "Ангара" |trans-title = ARMS-TASS: In 2007, the Space Forces ensured the reality of the deadlines for the commissioning of the promising Angara RSC |archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080601214358/http://armstass.su/?page=article&aid=49743&cid=25 |archive-date = 1 June 2008 |url-status = dead

Successor

Ukraine was developing a commercial derivative of the Tsyklon-3, the Tsyklon-4. The development of Tsyklon-4 ended in 2015 after Ukraine's development partner Brazil pulled out of the project. Tsyklon-4 never made it to launch pad.

Another successor to the Tsyklon rockets, Cyclone-4M (based on Tsyklon-4 designs), is under development as of 2021 for use in the commercial market.

Debris

2013 loss of Ecuadorian satellite after impact with Tsyklon-3 space debris

On 23 May 2013 at approximately 05:38 UTC, the Ecuadorian satellite NEE-01 Pegaso passed very close to the spent upper stage of a 1985 Tsyklon-3 rocket over the Indian Ocean. While there was no direct collision between the satellite and upper stage, Pegaso is believed to have suffered a "glancing blow" after passing through a debris cloud around the Tsyklon stage and striking one of the small pieces. After the incident, the satellite was found to be "spinning wildly over two of its axes" and unable to communicate with its ground station. Efforts to reestablish control of Pegaso failed, and on 28 August 2013 the decision was made by EXA and the Ecuadorian government to declare the satellite lost.

Other Debris events

The Tsyklon-3 rocket body used to launch the Meteor 2-16 on August 18, 1987 has fragmented five times between 1988 and 2006 due in part to propellant left inside the vehicle, resulting in more than 100 pieces of debris many of which are still in orbit.

References

References

  1. Barbosa, Rui C.. (2009-01-30). "Russian Tsyklon-3 bows out with CORONAS launch". NASASpaceflight.com.
  2. Krebs, Gunter D.. "Tsiklon-4 (Cyclone-4)". Gunter's Space Page.
  3. "An 82o Inclination Debris Cloud Revealed by Radar".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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