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词条 Saturn C-3
释义

  1. Lunar mission design

     Earth orbit rendezvous  Lunar orbit rendezvous 

  2. Variants and derivatives

     Saturn C-3B  Saturn C-3BN  Saturn INT-20 

  3. Post-Apollo development

     Jarvis  Pyrios 

  4. See also

  5. References

{{Infobox rocket
|image = File:Proposed_Saturn_C-3_Apollo_Configuration.jpg
|caption = Proposed Saturn C-3 and Apollo configuration (1962)
|name = Saturn C-3
|function = LEO and Lunar launch vehicle
|manufacturer = Boeing (S-IB-2)
North American (S-II-C3)
Douglas (S-IV)
|country-origin = United States
|cpl = 43.5 million
|cpl-year = 1985
|height = {{convert|269.0|ft|m}}
|diameter = {{convert|320|in|m}}
|mass = {{convert|1,023,670|lb|kg}}
|stages = 3
|capacities ={{Infobox rocket/Payload
|location= LEO
|kilos = {{convert|100000|lb|kg}}
}}{{Infobox rocket/Payload
|location= GTO
|kilos = {{convert|50000|lb|kg}}
}}{{Infobox rocket/Payload
|location= TLI
|kilos = {{convert|39,000|lb|kg}}
}}
|family = Saturn
|derivatives = Saturn INT-20, Saturn INT-21
|comparable = {{flatlist|
  • Falcon Heavy
  • New Glenn
  • Vulcan

}}


|status = Proposed (1961)
|sites = Kennedy Space Center SLC 37 (planned)
|stagedata={{Infobox rocket/Stage
|type = stage
|stageno = First
|name = S-IB-2
|length = {{convert|113.10|ft|m}}
|diameter = {{convert|320|in|m}}
|empty = {{convert|149,945|lb|kg}}
|gross = {{convert|1,599,433|lb|kg}}
|engines = 2 Rocketdyne F-1
|thrust = {{convert|3,000,000|lbf|kN}}
|burntime = 139 seconds
|SI = 265 sec (sea level)
|fuel = RP-1/LOX
}}{{Infobox rocket/Stage
|type = stage
|stageno = Second
|name = S-II-C3
|length = {{convert|69.80|ft|m}}
|diameter = {{convert|320|in|m}}
|empty = {{convert|54,978|lb|kg}}
|gross = {{convert|449,840|lb|kg}}
|engines = 4 Rocketdyne J-2
|thrust = {{convert|800,000|lbf|kN}}
|burntime = 200 seconds
|SI = 300 sec (sea level)
|fuel = LH2/LOX
}}{{Infobox rocket/Stage
|type = stage
|stageno = Third
|name = S-IV
|length = {{convert|61.6|ft|m}}
|diameter = {{convert|220|in|m}}
|empty = {{convert|11,501|lb|kg}}
|gross = {{convert|111,500|lb|kg}}
|engines = 6 Rocketdyne RL-10
|thrust = {{convert|90,000|lbf|kN}}
|burntime = 482 seconds
|SI = 410 sec
|fuel = LH2/LOX
}}
}}

The Saturn C-3 was the third rocket in the Saturn C series studied from 1959 to 1962. The design was for a three-stage launch vehicle that could launch {{convert|45,000|kg}} to low Earth orbit and send {{convert|18,000|kg}} to the Moon via trans-lunar injection.[1]

U.S. President Kennedy's proposal on May 25, 1961, of an explicit manned lunar landing goal spurred NASA to solidify its launch vehicle requirements for a lunar landing. A week earlier, William Fleming (Office of Space Flight Programs, NASA Headquarters) chaired an ad hoc committee to conduct a six-week study of the requirements for a lunar landing. Judging the direct ascent approach to be the most feasible, they concentrated their attention accordingly, and proposed circumlunar flights in late 1965 using the Saturn C-3 launch vehicle.

In early June 1961, Bruce Lundin, deputy director of the Lewis Research Center, led a week-long study of six different rendezvous possibilities. The alternatives included Earth-orbital rendezvous, lunar-orbital rendezvous, Earth and lunar rendezvous, and rendezvous on the lunar surface, employing Saturn C-1s, C-3s, and Nova designs. Lundin's committee concluded that rendezvous enjoyed distinct advantages over direct ascent and recommended an Earth-orbital rendezvous using two or three Saturn C-3s.[2]

NASA announced on September 7, 1961, that the government-owned Michoud Ordnance Plant near New Orleans, Louisiana, would be the site for fabrication and assembly of the Saturn C-3 first stage as well as larger vehicles in the Saturn program. Finalists were two government-owned plants in St. Louis and New Orleans. The height of the factory roof at Michoud meant that a launch vehicle with eight F-1 engines (Nova class, Saturn C-8) could not be built; four or five engines would have to be the maximum.

This decision ended consideration of a Nova class launch vehicle for direct ascent to the Moon or as heavy-lift companion with the Saturn C-3 for Earth orbit rendezvous.

Lunar mission design

Earth orbit rendezvous

The Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama developed an Earth orbit rendezvous proposal (EOR) for the Apollo program in 1960-1961. The proposal used a series of small rockets half the size of a Saturn V to launch different components of a spacecraft headed to the Moon. These components would be assembled in orbit around the Earth, then sent to the Moon via trans-lunar injection.

In order to test and validate the feasibility of the EOR approach for the Apollo program, Project Gemini was founded with this objective: "To effect rendezvous and docking with another vehicle (Agena target vehicle), and to maneuver the combined spacecraft using the propulsion system of the target vehicle."

The Saturn C-3 was the primary launch vehicle for Earth orbit rendezvous. The booster consisted of a first stage containing two Saturn V F-1 engines, a second stage containing four powerful J-2 engines, and the S-IV stage from a Saturn I booster. Only the S-IV stage of the Saturn C-3 was developed and flown, but all of the specified engines were used on the Saturn V rocket which took men to the moon.[3]

Lunar orbit rendezvous

The concept of lunar orbit rendezvous (LOR) was studied at Langley Research Center as early as 1960. John Houbolt's memorandum advocating LOR for lunar missions in November 1961 to Robert Seamans outlined the usage of the Saturn C-3 launch vehicle, and avoiding complex large boosters and lunar landers.[4]

After six months of further discussion NASA, in the summer of 1962, selected the lunar orbit rendezvous (LOR) proposal from Langley Research Center for the Apollo program.[5] By the end of 1962, the Saturn C-3 design was deemed not necessary for Apollo program requirements as larger boosters (Saturn C-4, Saturn C-5) were then proposed, hence further work on the Saturn C-3 was cancelled.[6]

Variants and derivatives

Since 1961 a number of variants of the Saturn C-3 have been studied, proposed, and funded. The most extensive studies focused on the Saturn C-3B variants before end of 1962, when lunar orbit rendezvous was selected and Saturn C-5 development approved. The common theme of these variants is a first stage with at least 3,044,000 lbf (13,540 kN) of sea-level thrust (SL). These designs used two or three Rocketdyne F-1 engines in a S-IB-2 or S-IC stage and diameters ranging from 8 to 10 meters (27 to 33 feet) that could lift up to {{convert|110000|lb}} to Low Earth Orbit (LEO).

The lack of a Saturn C-3 launch vehicle in 1965 created a large payload gap (LEO) between the Saturn IB's 21,000 kg (46,000 lb) capacity and the two-stage Saturn V's 75,000 kg (165,000 lb) capability. In the mid-1960s NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) initiated several studies for a launch vehicle to fill this payload capacity gap and to extend the capabilities of the Saturn family. Three companies provided proposals to MSFC for this requirement: Martin Marietta (builder of Atlas, Titan vehicles), Boeing (builder of S-1B and S-1C first stages), and North American (builder of the S-II second stage).

Saturn C-3B

The Saturn C-3B revision (1961) increased the total thrust of the three stages to 17,200 kN. The diameter of the first stage (S-IB-2) was increased to 33 feet (10 meters). The eventual first stage for the Saturn V (S-IC) would use this same diameter, but add 8 meters to its length. A further consideration added a third F-1 engine to the first stage.

The S-II, second stage diameter would be 8.3 meters (326 inches) and 21.3 meters (70 feet) in length. The S-IV, third stage diameter would be 5.5 meters and 12.2 meters in length.

Saturn C-3BN

{{main|NERVA}}

The Saturn C-3BN revision (1961) would use the NERVA for the third stage in this launch vehicle. The NERVA technology has been studied and proposed since mid-1950s for future space exploration.

Saturn INT-20

{{main|Saturn INT-20}}

On October 7, 1966 Boeing submitted a Final Report to the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, "Studies of Improved Saturn V Vehicles and Intermediate Payload Vehicles". That report outlined the Saturn INT-20, an intermediate two-stage launch vehicle with a S-1C first stage using three or four F-1 engines, and a S-IVB as the second stage with one J-2 engine. The vehicle's payload capacity for LEO would be 45,000 to 60,000 kg, comparable to the earlier Saturn C-3 design (1961). Boeing projected delivery and first flight in 1970, based on a decision by 1967.

Post-Apollo development

The need for a launch vehicle of Saturn C-3 capacity (45 metric tons to LEO) continued beyond the Apollo program. Cape Canaveral Air Force Station Space Launch Complex 37, initially designed to serve the Saturn I and I-B, was planned for eventual Saturn C-3 usage, but it was deactivated in 1972. In 2001, Boeing refurbished the complex for its Delta IV EELV launch vehicle. The Delta IV Heavy variant can only launch 22.5 metric tons to LEO.

The 1986 Space Shuttle Challenger disaster and 2010 Space Launch System program resulted in renewed proposals for Saturn C-3 derivatives using the Rocketdyne F-1A engines with existing booster cores and tooling (10m - Saturn S-IC stage; 8.4m - Space Shuttle external tank; 5.1m - Delta IV Common Booster Core).

Jarvis

{{main|Jarvis (rocket)}}

After the Space Shuttle Challenger disaster, the United States Air Force (USAF) and National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) conducted a joint Advanced Launch System study (1987-1990). Hughes Aircraft and Boeing dusted off the earlier Saturn C-3 design and submitted their proposal for the Jarvis launch vehicle.

The Jarvis would be a three-stage rocket, 58 m (190 ft) in height and 8.38 m (27.5 ft) in diameter. Designed to lift 38 tons to LEO, it would utilize F-1 and J-2 rocket engines and tooling in storage from the Saturn V rocket program along with more recent Shuttle-era technologies to provide lower launch costs.[7]

Pyrios

{{update section|date=January 2016}}{{as of|2012|4}}, Dynetics announced they were teaming with Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne to resurrect the Saturn V rocket's mighty F-1 engine to power NASA's Space Launch System planned heavy-lift launch vehicle, saying the Apollo-era engine will offer significantly more performance than solid-fueled boosters currently under development.

Dynetics of Huntsville, Alabama, is leading the contractor team proposing the F-1 engine design. Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne is the bid's propulsion partner and engine builder. Cook, NASA's former manager of the scrapped Ares rocket program, said each of the two Dynetics boosters, on an SLS mission would be propelled by a pair of RP-1/LOX F-1Bs, an advanced variant of the F-1, (1.5 million pounds of thrust) which was used on the Saturn V, and the F-1A. Developed during the later stages of the Apollo program, the F-1A was test fired, but never flew. Several were crated and stored by Rocketdyne (later Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne). The company has also maintained an F-1/F-1A knowledge retention program for its engineers for the entire period the engine has been mothballed. Dynetics is now performing tests on engine components pulled from storage."Each of those engines (F-1A) can get up to 1.8 million pounds of thrust (8,000 kN)," Cook said in an interview Wednesday. "This booster is a very simple, very standard booster. It's 18 feet (5.5 m) in diameter. It uses the same attach points as the current five-segment solid rocket booster."[8]

The Dynetics booster would attach at these points, in the SLS parallel staging design, which differs from the Saturn rockets' serial staging design. Because it applies thrust to an upper thrust beam in the SLS core, it lifts at the top rather than at the bottom (Saturn S-IC stage had a thrust structure). The proposed Dynetics booster is similar to the first stage of the Saturn C-3 in that it would employ two F-1 heritage engines.[9][10]

See also

  • Falcon Heavy
  • Delta IV Heavy
  • Jarvis (rocket)
  • New Glenn

References

Inline citations
1. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.astronautix.com/lvs/saturnc3.htm |title=Saturn C-3 |publisher=Astronautix.com |date= |accessdate=8 June 2012}}
2. ^{{cite book |url=http://www.hq.nasa.gov/pao/History/SP-4204/ch4-7.html |title=Moonport: A History of Apollo Launch Facilities and Operations |author1=Benson, Charles D. |author2=William Barnaby Faherty |publisher=NASA (SP-4204) |year=1978 |chapter=4-8 |accessdate=7 February 2013}}
3. ^{{cite book |author=Bilsten, Roger E. |publisher=NASA SP-4206 |title=Stages to Saturn |pages=48–63 |year=1980}}
4. ^{{cite book |author=Bilsten, Roger E. |publisher=NASA SP-4206 |title=Stages to Saturn |page=63 |year=1980}}
5. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.nasa.gov/centers/langley/news/factsheets/Rendezvous.html |title=The Rendezvous That Was Almost Missed: Lunar Orbit Rendezvous and the Apollo Program |publisher=NASA Langley Research Center |date=December 1992 |accessdate=8 June 2012}}
6. ^{{cite web |url=http://smartech.gatech.edu/jspui/bitstream/1853/8042/3/SSEC_SE2_doc.pdf |title=The Apollo Lunar Orbit Rendezvous Architecture Decision Revisited |publisher=National Institute of Aerospace, Georgia Tech |author1=David M. Reeves |author2=Michael D. Scher |author3=Alan W. Wilhite |author4=Douglas O. Stanley |year=2005 |accessdate=8 June 2012 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20141027163457/https://smartech.gatech.edu/jspui/bitstream/1853/8042/3/SSEC_SE2_doc.pdf |archivedate=27 October 2014 |df= }}
7. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.astronautix.com/lvs/jarvis.htm |title=Jarvis launch vehicle |publisher=Astronautix.com |date= |accessdate=8 June 2012}}
8. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.spaceflightnow.com/news/n1204/18dynetics/ |title=Rocket companies hope to repurpose Saturn 5 engines |publisher=Spaceflight Now |author=Stephen Clark |date=18 April 2012 |accessdate=9 June 2012}}
9. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2012/11/dynetics-pwr-liquidize-sls-booster-competition-f-1-power/ |title=Dynetics and PWR aiming to liquidize SLS booster competition with F-1 power |publisher=Spaceflight.com |author=Chris Bergin |date=9 November 2012 |accessdate=2 March 2013 }}
10. ^{{cite web |url=https://arstechnica.com/science/2013/04/new-f-1b-rocket-engine-upgrades-apollo-era-deisgn-with-1-8m-lbs-of-thrust/ |title=New F-1B rocket engine upgrades Apollo-era design with 1.8M lbs of thrust |publisher=ars technica |author=Lee Hutchinson |date=14 April 2013}}
Bibliography
  • Bilstein, Roger E, Stages to Saturn, US Government Printing Office, 1980. {{ISBN|0-16-048909-1}}. Excellent account of the evolution, design, and development of the Saturn launch vehicles.
  • Stuhlinger, Ernst, et al., Astronautical Engineering and Science: From Peenemuende to Planetary Space, McGraw-Hill, New York, 1964.
  • Jet Propulsion Lab; NASA Report - October 2, 1961; Some Interrelationships and Long Range Implications of C-3 Lunar Rendezvous and solid Nova vehicle concepts. Accessed at: https://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/19740072519_1974072519.pdf.
  • Robert P. Smith, Apollo Projects Office, NASA Report, Project Apollo - A description of a Saturn C-3 and Nova vehicle. July 25, 1961. Accessed at: https://ntrs.nasa.gov/archive/nasa/casi.ntrs.nasa.gov/19790076768_1979076768.pdf.
  • NASA, "Earth Orbital Rendezvous for an Early Manned Lunar Landing," pt. I, "Summary Report of Ad Hoc Task Group Study" [Heaton Report], August 1961.
  • David S. Akens, Saturn Illustrated Chronology: Saturn's First Eleven Years, April 1957 through April 1968, 5th ed., MHR-5 (Huntsville, AL : MSFC, 20 Jan. 1971).
  • Boeing Study, Marshall Space Flight Center, '"Final Report - Studies of Improved Saturn V Vehicles and Intermediate Payload Vehicles'", October 7, 1966 Accessed at: http://www.astronautix.com/data/satvint.pdf
{{Include-NASA}}{{Expendable launch systems}}{{saturns}}

3 : Apollo program|Saturn (rocket family)|Cancelled space launch vehicles

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