Minotaur III explained

Minotaur III
Function:Heavy suborbital launch system
Manufacturer:Orbital Sciences
Country-Origin:United States
Stages:Four
Capacities:
Status:Canceled
Sites:Vandenberg SFB, SLC-8
PSCA, LP-1
Launches:0
Stagedata:
Type:stage
Stageno:First
Thrust:[1]
Si: (sea level)[2]
Burntime:56.6 seconds
Type:stage
Stageno:Second
Burntime:61 seconds
Type:stage
Stageno:Third
Burntime:72 seconds
Fuel:NEPE
Type:stage
Stageno:Fourth

The Minotaur III, also known as OSP-2 Target Launch Vehicle, Peacekeeper TLV, or OSP-2 TLV was an American rocket concept derived from the LGM-118 Peacekeeper missile. It was a member of the Minotaur family of rockets produced by Orbital Sciences Corporation (now part of Northrop Grumman) and would have been used for long-range suborbital launches with heavy payloads.[3] The Minotaur III was to be capable of launching of payload downrange.[4] This role has been taken over by the near-identical Minotaur IV Lite and the lighter-lift Minotaur II.

Minotaur III launches would have been conducted from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California and the Kodiak Launch Complex in Alaska.

Description

Minotaur III was a four-stage launch vehicle, essentially made up of a Peacekeeper missile with a Super-HAPS fourth stage, along with the Orbital-designed avionics package featured on Minotaur rockets.[3] The first stage would have been an SR118 motor burning for 56.6 seconds, followed by the SR119 second stage motor burning for 61 seconds. The first and second stages would have average thrusts of and, respectively. The third stage S120 motor would then burn with an average thrust of for 72 seconds, sending the payload and Super-HAPS on their final suborbital trajectory. The first three stages would feature thrust vector control to maneuver and steer the rocket.

Super-HAPS would then be used for final payload maneuvering and guidance, allowing Minotaur to provide high precision for the payload's landing or re-entry location. Super-HAPS would have been a larger and more capable variant of the monopropellant Hydrazine Auxiliary Propulsion System (HAPS), which was developed as a final maneuvering stage for the Pegasus rocket and later flown on the Minotaur I and Minotaur IV rockets. HAPS featured three MR-107K thrusters, whereas Super-HAPS would have had 12.

The Minotaur III has never flown, and as of May 2024, the vehicle is no longer mentioned in Minotaur-related documents and is most likely canceled. Its role was filled by the similar Minotaur IV Lite, which sports a larger fairing and no fourth stage and can send of payload (the same as Minotaur III) further downrange. The Minotaur II is also available for smaller payloads, such as intercept test targets.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Minotaur IV, V, VI User's Guide . 2020-09-10. 2024-05-14. Northrop Grumman. northropgrumman.com.
  2. Web site: Minotaur V Launch Vehicle. Patrick. Blau. 2017-02-02. 2024-05-15. spaceflight101.com.
  3. Web site: Minotaur-3 (OSP-2 Peacekeepr TLV). Gunter. Krebs. Gunter's Space Page. 2009-05-06.
  4. Web site: Minotaur-3/-4/-5 (OSP-2 Peacekeeper SLV). Gunter. Krebs. Gunter's Space Page. 2009-05-06.