Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Andøya Space

Coordinates:69°17′39″N16°01′15″E / 69.29417°N 16.02083°E /69.29417; 16.02083 (Andoya Rocket Range)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Norwegian space research facility
Andøya Space
Agency overview
AbbreviationASC
Formed1962; 63 years ago (1962)
TypeSpace agency
OwnerRoyal Norwegian Ministry of Trade and Industry andKongsberg Defence & Aerospace
Employees100
Websitehttp://andoyaspace.no
Andøya Space is located in Norway
Andøya Space
Show map of Norway
Andøya Space is located in Nordland
Andøya Space
Show map of Nordland
Map all coordinates usingOpenStreetMapDownload coordinates asKML

Andøya Space, also namedAndøya Space Center and formerlyAndøya Rocket Range, is arocket launch site,rocket range, andspaceport onAndøya island (the northernmost in theVesterålen archipelago) inAndøy Municipality inNordland county,Norway.

Since 1962, over 1,200sounding andsub-orbital rockets of various configurations have been launched from the site.

Andøya Space is a civilian, limited liability company with its ownership split between two groups: 90% by theRoyal Norwegian Ministry of Trade and Industry, and 10% byKongsberg Defence Systems company.[1] It operates on a commercial basis. Andøya Space also supports theSvalRak launch facility inNy-Ålesund, Svalbard to the north. The facility has provided operations for bothESA,NASA,JAXA andDLR missions and related scientific research.

History

[edit]
[icon]
This sectionneeds expansion with: Andoya rocket range history prior to the establishment of the 2nd rocket range in 1997. You can help byadding to it.(April 2018)

Ferdinand 1

[edit]
View over Oksebåsen, the area Andøya Space is located. Photo taken from amultirotor.

On August 18, 1962, the rocket that was to take Norway into the space age, Ferdinand 1, launched from Andøya Rocket Range. This happened only five years after theSoviet Union launched the first man-made satellite,Sputnik 1.

An elongated cyllindric object, ending with a cone, placed on a small, openwork trolley, in front of a hangar, on a sunny day.
Sounding rocket payload prepared to be launched from Andoya Rocket Range in 2007.

The Norwegian scientists named the rocket "Ferdinand" afterthe story of the peaceful bull that did not like to fight but would rather sit in the meadow smelling the flowers. The name was appropriate since the area of the Rocket Range was called Oksebåsen, "The Ox Pasture". This was during theCold War, so the name should also indicate that Andøya Rocket Range only had peaceful intentions with its research.

Ferdinand-1 was aNIKE-Cajun two-stage rocket that carried two instruments in its payload. The purpose of the launch was to do measurements in the ionosphere, where charged particles from the Sun ionize the atoms. The process is most intense in the polar ionosphere, and is important not only for theNorthern Lights, but also for long-range radio communication, because the free electrons reflect the radio waves. The goal was to explore the possibility of improving long-range radio communication.

The rocket was 7.7 m (25 ft) long, had a total weight of 698 kg (1,539 lb) and a maximum speed of 6,760 km/h (4,200 mph). It reached a height of 102 km (63 mi) into the atmosphere. Launching and collecting data after the first rocket was considered a success. Ferdinand 1 became the first of a number of successful rocket launches fromAndøya.[2]

Svalbard Rocket Range

[edit]

In 1997, a second launch site—Svalbard Rocket Range—was established atNy-Ålesund,Svalbard, enabling scientists to launch sounding rockets straight in thepolar cusp, where the Earth's magnetic field lines converge.

A ground-based,lidar observatory, ALOMAR (Arctic Lidar Observatory for Middle Atmosphere Research) opened in 1994, and is considered[by whom?] unique in atmospheric research in the Arctic. The range is also host of northern Europe's largestVHF-radar.[3]

In 1995, aBlack Brant sounding rocket launched from Andøya caused a high alert in Russia, known as theNorwegian Rocket Incident.[4] The Russians thought it might be a nuclear missile launched from an American submarine. PresidentBoris Yeltsin was alerted for a possible counter strike, when the Russians understood that it was not heading towards Russia. Russia was informed in advance about the launch, but this information was lost in the Russian bureaucracy, and never reached the radar operators; only seafarers were notified.[5]

The space center changed its name from Andøya Rocket Range on 6 June 2014 to reflect an increased focus on also other activities than sounding rockets, though rocketry is still its main focus.[citation needed] Other activities areUAVs, lidar and radar measurements for atmospheric research and also a test center for missiles through its subsidiary Andøya Test Center.

Orbital Launch Plans

[edit]

Andøya has been proposed as aspaceport for launchingorbitalNanosatellite launch vehicles (NLVs).

North Star

[edit]

In January 2013, theNammo company and the Andøya Space Center announced that they would be "developing arocketsystem calledNorth Star that will use a standardizedhybrid motor, clustered in different numbers and arrangements, to build two types ofsounding rockets and anorbital launcher" that would be able to deliver a 10 kg (22 lb)nanosat intopolar orbit.[6][needs update]

Andøya Spaceport  

[edit]

Andøya Spaceport was established as a project in 2018,[7] with the aim of establishing the first European launch base for small satellites. It is mainly satellites for Earth observation and communications that are planned to be launched from Andøya, in polar- or Sun-synchronous orbit. In polar orbit, the satellite passes above or near the Earth's poles at each orbit. This is favorable for Norway as they then provide good satellite coverage of Norwegian areas, good communication and sea monitoring in the north. Sun-synchronous orbit means that the satellite passes a given latitude to two fixed local times, one for northbound and one for southbound passage. The satellite's orbital plane rotates eastwards approx. 1 degree per day, and so it maintains the angle with respect to the sunlight and gets most light for its solar cells. In this way, satellites for Earth observation receive data with an equal amount of sunlight and can thus use data to analyze changes that occur on the surface throughout the year. Norway funded the site with NOK 365.6 million, expecting a commercial return of the investment.[8]

Commercial Partnerships

[edit]

2020-Present

[edit]

Isar Aerospace

[edit]

Isar Aerospace of Germany signed an agreement with Andøya Space, securing exclusive access for a period of up to twenty years to one launch pad on the island Andøya. As a launch site operator, the Andøya Spaceport provides launch pads, payload integration facilities as well as the technical infrastructure on site.[9]

Ingun Berget, President of Andøya Spaceport said: “The opening of the spaceport on Andøya island marks an important milestone for Norway, European New Space industry and our partnership with Isar Aerospace: This enables us to have the first satellite launches ever from European soil to take place from Andøya. The attendance of today's opening by Crown Prince Haakon underlines the importance of our endeavor and puts us on the New Space map in Europe.”[10]

Daniel Metzler, CEO and Co-Founder of Isar Aerospace said: “Today, Norway, the Andøya region and Isar Aerospace take a big step towards space. Over the last five years, we have built a rocket that will help to solve the most crucial bottleneck in the European space industry – sovereign and competitive access to space. Together with Andøya Spaceport, our team has created an excellent piece of engineering, the first orbital launch site in continental Europe which will bring this access to space to Norway, and back to Europe. For Isar Aerospace, this step equals entering the final stages of our path to first flight. For Europe, it means being able to harness the power of the space platform.”[10]

Pads

[edit]
Map
About OpenStreetMaps
Maps: terms of use
6km
3.7miles
A
n
d
f
j
o
r
d
e
n
G
a
v
l
f
j
o
r
d
e
n
R
i
s
ø
y
s
u
n
d
e
t
Norwegian
Sea
Kvasstinden
(705m)
Kvasstinden
Kvasstinden
HINNØYA
Hinnøya
Hinnøya
Skogvoll
Nature
Reserve
Risøyhamn
Risøyhamn
Risøyhamn
ANDØYA
Andøya Spaceport
Orbital Pads
Bleik
Bleik
Bleik
Andenes
Andøya Space Centre
(sub-orbital pads)
File:Oslo in Norway 2024.svg

Andøya has six launch pads during all or part of its life as a launch site:[citation needed]

Accidents and incidents

[edit]

On 30 March 2025, the inaugural launch ofIsar Aerospace's first space launcher, theSpectrum rocket, experienced an anomaly and was terminated 30 seconds into flight before falling back to the earth and exploding on the mission "Going Full Spectrum".[11][12][13][14]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"About ASC". Retrieved13 March 2018.
  2. ^Thrane, Eivind V. (2018-12-07)."The history of Andøya Rocket Range".History of Geo- and Space Sciences.9 (2):141–156.Bibcode:2018HGSS....9..141T.doi:10.5194/hgss-9-141-2018.ISSN 2190-5029.
  3. ^V, THRANE E.; U, VON ZAHN (September 1995)."ALOMAR-A New Facility for Middle Atmosphere Research at Arctic Latitudes".Journal of Geomagnetism and Geoelectricity.47 (9):921–928.Bibcode:1995JGG....47..921T.doi:10.5636/jgg.47.921.
  4. ^Budalen, Andreas; Dan Henrik Klausen (February 26, 2012)."Verden har aldri vært nærmere atomkrig".Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation. RetrievedMay 12, 2012.
  5. ^Pry, Peter (1999)."Black Brant XII".War scare: Russia and America on the nuclear brink. New York: Praeger. pp. 214–227.ISBN 0-275-96643-7.
  6. ^Lindsey, Clark (2013-01-28)."North Star rocket family with hybrid propulsion".NewSpace Watch. Archived fromthe original on 2013-06-20. Retrieved2013-01-28.
  7. ^fiskeridepartementet, Nærings-og (2019-12-13)."Meld. St. 10 (2019–2020)".Regjeringen.no (in Norwegian). Retrieved2020-03-12.
  8. ^"Grønt lys for satellittoppskyting fra Andøya".Tu.no (in Norwegian).Teknisk Ukeblad. 8 October 2021.
  9. ^"Launch site secured: Isar Aerospace signs exclusive launch pad in Norway for up to 20 years".Isar Aerospace. Retrieved2024-05-22.
  10. ^ab"Andøya Spaceport, future launch site of Isar Aerospace, opened in official ceremony with Crown Prince Haakon of Norway".Isar Aerospace. Retrieved2024-05-22.
  11. ^Martin Smith (24 March 2025)."Launch Roundup: Alpha, Spectrum, Electron, and Falcon 9 set to fly". NasaSpaceFlight.
  12. ^Justin Davenport (30 March 2025)."Isar Aerospace set for second attempt at first orbital launch from continental Europe". NasaSpaceFlight.
  13. ^NSF (30 March 2025).Livestream: First test flight of Isar Aerospace.IKLQxe2MvpQ onYouTube – via Isar Aerospace.
  14. ^Schmitt, Tina."Isar Aerospace lifts off successfully during first test flight of orbital launch vehicle".Isar Aerospace. No. 30 March, 2025.

External links

[edit]
Active
Asia
Europe
United States
Oceania
South America
International waters
Proposed
Historical
Authority control databasesEdit this at Wikidata

69°17′39″N16°01′15″E / 69.29417°N 16.02083°E /69.29417; 16.02083 (Andoya Rocket Range)

Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Andøya_Space&oldid=1319556549"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp