Monica (rocket) explained

Monica
Height:3.05 to 6.27m
Mass:62 to 154 kg
Stages:3
Country-Origin:France
Sites:CIEES, CERES Ile du Levant
Payload:Up to 100 kg
Diameter:1.3 to 1.6 m
Status:Succeeded by the ONERA test vehicles

Monica is the designation of a small French sounding rocket.[1] It was intended as a cheaper counterpart to the relatively expensive Veronique rockets.[2]

Monica was a 3-stage rocket, with all stages burning solid fuel: the Melanie (burning Plastolite) for the first stage and Theodore and Oreste (burning Epictete) for the second and third stages. The first stage delivered 450 daN (decanewtons) for 3 seconds and the two upper stages deliver 50 daN for 15 and 5.5 seconds, respectively.

It was built in several versions (Meteo, Monica I to V, MD-01, Grannos),[3] [4] which were between 3.05 and 6.27 m long and had a takeoff weight between 62 and 154 kg.

It was launched several times between 1955 and 1962 at the CIEES launch site in Hammaguir, French Algeria, and the Ile du Levant site in France.

The Monica design process encountered a number of difficulties, leading to many failed tests and the early cancellation of the program in 1962. However, elements of its design were later incorporated into more successful ONERA test vehicles.[5]

Versions

Monica vehicles used different solid fuel rocket engines:

Monica rocket engine characteristics!Stage / Engine!Length(mm)!Diameter(mm)!Propellant mass(kg)!Total impulse(daNs)!Burning time(s)
Melanie10651601531005
"2Melanie"21701603062005
Prosper118016023.5470010
Theodore8151309.4180010
Oreste4901303.66808

Monica vehicles had several versions, according to the rocket stages used:

Monica version characteristics
TypeStagesLength (mm)Total weight (kg)Payload weight (kg)Peak altitude (km)
Monica IMelanie-Theodore-Oreste3050621553
Monica IIMelanie-Theodore-Theodore33757115103
Monica III"2Melanie"-Prosper-Theodore484511815145
Monica IVAMelanie-Prosper-Prosper51151231594
Monica IVB"2Melanie"-Melanie-Prosper51151231594
Monica V"2Melanie"-Prosper-Prosper627015415160

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Krebs . Gunter D . Monica . 2023-09-04 . Gunter's Space Page . en.
  2. Web site: Wade . Mark . Monica . 2023-09-04 . Encyclopedia Astronautica.
  3. Web site: Wade . Mark . Monica I . 2023-09-04 . Encyclopedia Astronautica.
  4. Web site: Wade . Mark . Monica IV . 2023-09-04 . Encyclopedia Astronautica.
  5. Web site: Jacques Serra. Jean. The Monica rockets. Rockets in Europe. 27 April 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20121114060300/http://fuseurop.univ-perp.fr/monica_e.htm. 14 November 2012. dead.