Pacific Spaceport Complex – Alaska

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Pacific Spaceport Complex – Alaska

The Pacific Spaceport Complex – Alaska (PSCA), formerly known as the Kodiak Launch Complex (KLC), is a dual-use commercial and military spaceport for sub-orbital and orbital launch vehicles.[1] The facility is owned and operated by the Alaska Aerospace Corporation, a corporation owned by the Government of Alaska,[2][3] and is located on Kodiak Island in Alaska.

Quick Facts Location, Coordinates ...
Pacific Spaceport Complex – Alaska
Athena I vehicle with Kodiak Star mission outside the Launch Service Structure in 2001
LocationKodiak Island, Alaska
United States
Coordinates57°26′07″N 152°20′24″W
OperatorAlaska Aerospace Corporation (Government of Alaska)
Launch history
Launches31
First launch6 November 1998
Last launch10 January 2023
Associated
rockets
Athena I, Minotaur IV, Astra Rocket, RS1
Launch Pad 1 launch history
Launches4
First launch30 September 2001
Athena I
Last launch21 October 2021
Unknown
Associated
rockets
Athena I
Minotaur IV
Launch Pad 3B launch history
Launches5
First launch12 September 2020
Rocket 3.0
Last launch15 March 2022
Rocket 3.3
Associated
rockets
Rocket 3
Launch Pad 3C launch history
Launches1
First launch10 January 2023
RS1
Associated
rockets
RS1
Close

The spaceport opened in 1998 and has supported 31 (up to January 2023) launches, most of those for the U.S. government. The site was closed for two years following a launch failure that caused significant damage to parts of the spaceport. It reopened in August 2016.

History

Summarize
Perspective

Following the incorporation of the Alaska Aerospace Development Corporation in 1991 by the Alaska state legislature, plans were begun for the spaceport, known during development as the Alaska Orbital Launch Complex. Construction on the site began in January 1998, and the first launch took place in August 1998 from temporary accommodations at the site.[4]

After a launch failure in August 2014 damaged the launch tower, payload processing facility and integrated processing facility,[5] Alaska Aerospace made plans to repair and upgrade the facilities to support larger rockets, but Governor Bill Walker stopped work in December 2014 as part of an order to address a state budget shortfall.[6] Repairs to the facility were funded by state insurance at a cost of US$26–29 million.[7] During efforts to repair the facilities, the spaceport was formally renamed to "Pacific Spaceport Complex – Alaska" in an announcement made on 14 April 2015.[8] The facility was formally re-dedicated on 13 August 2016, to celebrate the completion of repairs.[1]

In mid-2016, the Alaska Aerospace Corporation "signed a multi-year contract with the Missile Defense Agency (MDA) for multiple launches from the PSCA through 2021". The arrangement includes a sole-source contract for two flight tests of the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system. Two private companies, Rocket Lab and Vector Space Systems, were considering using the spaceport for commercial launches as early as 2019.[1] Another private company, Eclipse Orbital, was working with the Alaska Aerospace Corporation to prepare for flight operations of their "Corona" launch vehicle in 2020. As of 2022, however, none of these companies have launched anything from Alaska.

Indian private space company Agnikul Cosmos signed a memorandum of agreement with Alaska Aerospace Corporation to test launch their Agnibaan rocket from the Pacific Spaceport Complex. The launch from Alaska was expected to take place from 2022 onwards. Under the agreement, Alaska Aerospace and AgniKul will work together to secure several regulatory approvals including US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) launch licensing, US export control, and will comply with export laws & regulations in India to receive necessary clearances from the Indian authorities as well. The aim is to define launch vehicle-spaceport interfaces, related procedures and conduct at least one test launch from PSCA.[9]

On 19 November 2021, Astra's LV0007 rocket achieved orbit from the Pacific Spaceport Complex.[10]

Launch facilities

The Kodiak spaceport has two launch pads with a mission control center that includes 64 workstations with high-speed communications and data links. There is a clean room for preparing satellites for launch, a fully enclosed 17-story-tall rocket assembly building and two independent range and telemetry systems. The complex sits on 3,700 acres (15 km2) of state-owned land. Launch pad 1 is designed for orbital launches, while launch pad 2 is intended for sub-orbital launches.[3]

In 2010, Alaska Aerospace Corp. developed a concept plan for a third launch pad, which would allow the facility to support quick launches of satellites: under 24 hours to launch from "go ahead".[3][needs update]

Launch history

Summarize
Perspective

The first orbital launch from the PSCA was an Athena I rocket which carried out the Kodiak Star mission for NASA and the Space Test Program, launching Starshine 3, Sapphire, PCSat, and PICOSatS on 30 September 2001.[11]

More information No., Date (UTC) ...
Launches from Kodiak Launch Complex
No.Date (UTC)VehiclePayloadPadOrbital/SuborbitalResultRemarks
16 November 1998
01:32
First stage: Aerojet SR-19-AJ-1
Second stage: Hercules M57A1
ait-1[12]LP-2SuborbitalSuccess[13]Mission for the U.S. Air Force. Carried various experiments and instruments, including a "Global Positioning System antenna, Honeywell GPS Measure Unit, Electromagnetic Radio Tomography experiment, Langmuir probe and an Air Force nosetip".[13]
2 15 September 1999
21:00[14]
First stage: Castor 4B
Second stage: Hercules M57A1
ait-2[15][16]LP-2SuborbitalSuccess[17]Mission for the U.S. Air Force. Carried various experiments and instruments, including a Langmuir probe, the Boston Rocket Ionospheric Tomography Experiment, an interceptor seeker, and calibration equipment.[15]
322 March 2001[18]Aries 47[19]QRLV-1LP-2SuborbitalSuccess[18]Mission for the U.S. Air Force.
430 September 2001
02:40[11]
Athena I (LM-001)LP-1OrbitalSuccessKodiak Star mission for Lockheed/NASA; first orbital launch from Kodiak.
59 November 2001
18:12
Polaris A-3 STARS-1[20]LP-2SuborbitalFailureWest Coast Risk-Reduction Flight (WCRRF) for the U.S. Army.[20] Rocket exploded 56 seconds after launch.[5]
624 April 2002[21]Aries 49[19]QRLV-2LP-2SuborbitalSuccess[21]Mission for the U.S. Air Force.
715 December 2004
04:45[22]
Polaris A-3 STARS-1[20]LP-2SuborbitalFailureIFT-13c mission for Missile Defense Agency (MDA). Target successfully launched from Kodiak, but interceptor failed to launch from Kwajalein.
814 February 2005
06:22[22]
Polaris A-3 STARS-1[20]LP-2SuborbitalFailureIFT-14 mission for MDA. Target successfully launched from Kodiak, but interceptor failed to launch from Kwajalein.
923 February 2006
16:09
Polaris A-3 STARS-1[20]LP-2SuborbitalSuccessFTX-01 mission for MDA.
101 September 2006
17:22
Polaris A-3 STARS-1[20]LP-2SuborbitalSuccessFTG-02 mission for MDA. Both the target at Kodiak and interceptor at Kwajalein successfully launched.[23]
1125 May 2007
14:15
Polaris A-3 STARS-1[20]LP-2SuborbitalFailureFTG-03 mission for MDA. Target missile from Kodiak flew off course and interceptor was not launched.
1228 September 2007
20:01
Polaris A-3 STARS-1[20]LP-2SuborbitalSuccessFTG-03a mission for MDA. Successful intercept.
1318 July 2008
22:47[24]
Polaris A-3 STARS-1[20]LP-2SuborbitalSuccessFTX-03 mission for MDA. Target launched from Kodiak was tracked by land-based, sea-based and space-based tracking systems. Navy and Air Force units simulated interceptor shootdowns.[25]
145 December 2008
20:04
Polaris A-3 STARS-1[20]LP-2SuborbitalSuccessFTG-05 mission for MDA. Successful intercept of a target launched from Kodiak by an interceptor launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base.[26]
1520 November 2010
01:25[27]
Minotaur IVLP-1OrbitalSuccessSTP-S26 mission for the U.S. Air Force. Included a Hydrazine Auxiliary Propulsion System (HAPS) to move vehicle to a secondary orbit after ejecting payloads.
1627 September 2011
15:49[28]
Minotaur IV+TacSat-4LP-1OrbitalSuccessMission for the U.S. Air Force.
1725 August 2014
~08:00
Polaris STARS IV[29]Advanced Hypersonic WeaponLP-2SuborbitalFailureFlight Test 2 for the U.S. Army's AHW program. Flight terminated by range safety four seconds after launch due to rocket anomaly.[5][30] Kodiak's LP-1 launch tower, payload processing facility, and integrated processing facility suffered damage due to the termination.[5]
18June 2017UnknownUnknownUnknownSuborbitalUnknownFTT-18 mission for the MDA[31]
19July 2017UnknownUnknownUnknownSuborbitalUnknownFET-01 mission for the MDA[31]
2020 July 2018Astra Rocket 1.0UnknownLP-2SuborbitalFailureP120 mission for a commercial sponsor[31] Astra
2129 November 2018Astra Rocket 2.0UnknownLP-2SuborbitalFailurePrivate commercial mission [32] for Astra
2226 July 2019Arrow IIILP-2SuborbitalSuccessIn a joint Israeli-American test conducted by the Israeli Air Force and Missile Defense Agency, the Arrow 3 system successfully intercepted 3 "enemy" rockets, one of them outside the atmosphere. The tests demonstrated Arrow 3's ability to intercept exo-atmospheric targets.[33][34]
2326 July 2019Arrow IIILP-2SuborbitalSuccessIn a joint Israeli-American test conducted by the Israeli Air Force and Missile Defense Agency, the Arrow 3 system successfully intercepted 3 "enemy" rockets, one of them outside the atmosphere. The tests demonstrated Arrow 3's ability to intercept exo-atmospheric targets.[33][34]
2426 July 2019Arrow IIILP-2SuborbitalSuccessIn a joint Israeli-American test conducted by the Israeli Air Force and Missile Defense Agency, the Arrow 3 system successfully intercepted 3 "enemy" rockets, one of them outside the atmosphere. The tests demonstrated Arrow 3's ability to intercept exo-atmospheric targets.[33][34]
2512 September 2020
03:19
Rocket 3LP-3B[35]OrbitalFailureFirst test mission for the Astra Rocket 3.[36]
2615 December 2020
20:55
Rocket 3LP-3BOrbitalFailureSecond test mission for the Astra Rocket 3, reaching all planned objectives (count and liftoff; reaching Max Q; nominal first-stage engine cutoff) but not making it into orbit.[37]
2728 August 2021
22:35
Rocket 3STP-27AD1LP-3BOrbitalFailureFirst commercial Rocket 3 launch, and first of two demonstration launches for the U.S. Space Force. The rocket was terminated at main engine cut-off due to anomalies during flight.[38]
2821 October 2021UnknownFT-3LP-1SuborbitalFailureHypersonic Flight Test-3. Launch failed due to booster failure.[39]
2920 November 2021
06:16
Rocket 3STP-27AD2LP-3BOrbitalSuccessSecond of two demonstration launches for the U.S. Space Force and first Rocket 3 successful launch.[10]
3015 March 2022
16:22
Rocket 3S4 CROSSOVER, OreSat0, SpaceBEE × 16LP-3BOrbitalSuccessS4 CROSSOVER remained attached to the second stage, which was intended.[40]
3110 January 2023
23:27
RS1VariSat-1A, 1BLP-3COrbitalFailureMaiden flight of RS1 and first launch from LP-3C. The launch resulted in a failure.[41]
Close
  • Additional sources: Center for Defense Information,[42] Missile Defense Agency[43]

The list above contains all launches, orbital and suborbital, up to January 2023.

References

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