R-2 (missile) explained

Is Missile:yes
R-2
Origin:USSR
Type:Theatre ballistic missile
Short-range ballistic missile
Used By:Soviet Union
Manufacturer:Yuzhmash and OKB-1
Propellant:LOX / Alcohol
Service:27 November 1951 – 1962
Engine:RD-101
Weight:19,632 kg
Length:17.65 m
Diameter:1.65 m
Wingspan:3.60 m
Speed:2175 m/s
Vehicle Range:576km (358miles)
Accuracy:8 km[1]

The R-2 (NATO reporting name SS-2 Sibling) was a Soviet short-range ballistic missile developed from and having twice the range as the R-1 missile (itself a copy of the German V-2). Developed from 1946-1951, the R-2 entered service in numbers in 1953 and was deployed in mobile units throughout the Soviet Union until 1962. A sounding rocket derivative, the R-2A, tested a prototype of the dog-carrying capsule flown on Sputnik 2 in 1957. The same year, the R-2 was licensed for production in The People's Republic of China, where it entered service as the Dongfeng 1.

History

In 1945 the Soviets captured several key A-4 (V-2) rocket production facilities, and also gained the services of some German scientists and engineers related to the project. Under the supervision of the Special technical Commission (OTK) established by the Soviet Union to oversee rocketry operations in Germany, A-4s were assembled and studied. This prompted the 13 May 1946 decree of the Soviet Council of Ministers for, in part, the development of a Soviet copy of the A-4, which would be the first domestically produced ballistic missile. A further decree on 16 May converted the M.I. Kalinin Plant No. 88, which had produced artillery and tanks during World War II into NII-88, tasked with managing the Soviet Union's long-range rocketry programs.[2] In April 1947 Josef Stalin authorized the production of the R-1 missile, the designation for the Soviet copy of V-2.[3] NII-88 chief designer Sergei Korolev oversaw the R-1's development.[2] Testing of the R-1 proceeded from 1948 to 1950,[4] and the R-1 missile system entered into service in the Soviet Army on 28 November 1950.[5] [6]

By the latter half of 1946, Korolev and rocket engineer Valentin Glushko had, with extensive input from German engineers, outlined a successor to the R-1 with an extended frame and a new engine designed by Glushko.[2] The R-2 would have a range of, twice that of the R-1, while maintaining a similar payload of around .[4]

Korolev proposed commencement of the R-2 project in January 1947, but it was declined by the Soviet government, which favored development of the more technologically conservative R-1.[2] Moreover, development of the R-2 was in direct competition with the G-1 missile being concurrently developed by Helmut Gröttrup, head of a German team of engineers. Though the G-1 was a compelling design, able to lift a payload three times heavier than that of the A-4, and with higher precision and a shorter launch preparation time, it was politically infeasible to leave the Soviet missile program in the hands of Germans. Thus, on April 14, 1948, the same decree that authorized the operational production of the R-1 also sanctioned development of the R-2. The G-1 was ultimately never completed.[2]

Description

Like its predecessor, the R-1, the R-2 was a single-stage missile using ethanol as a fuel and liquid oxygen as an oxidizer.[4] At a length of and a mass of, the R-2 was longer and the dry weight of was about heavier than the R-1.[7] Maximum body diameter remained, the same as the R-1,[2] and in the interests of conservatism, the R-2 retained the R-1's graphite stabilizing fins, though they reduced lifting capacity and caused heating and stress issues.[2]

The R-2 design included four major improvements over the R-1:

Development

Test launches of an experimental version of the R-2, designated R-2E, began on 25 September 1949. Five of these slightly shorter rockets were fired from Kapustin Yar, three of them successfully. The R-1A, a variant of the R-1 developed largely to test the separable warhead concept to be used in the R-2, was also test-flown in 1949. Launches of the full-scale R-2 began on 21 October 1950, the last being fired on 20 December. None of the 12 flights in this series fulfilled their primary objectives due to engine failures, warhead trajectory errors, and malfunctions with the guidance systems.[2]

A second series of tests was carried out between 2-27 July, 1951. The R-2 had been made more reliable by then, and twelve of the thirteen flights successfully reached their targets.[2] A subsequent series of 18 launches in 1951 had 14 successes.[4] Per an order dated 27 November, 1951, the R-2 was formally adopted as operational armament for the Soviet Union,[2] and production was authorized at factory 586 in Dnepropetrovsk three days later. Mass production began at this factory in June 1953. As with the R-1, reliability remained suboptimal. In a series of 14 operational R-2s test-launched in 1952, only 12 reached their target.[4]

Military service

The R-2 was deployed in Supreme Command Reserve (RVGK) engineer brigades[4] consisting of three divizions each equipped with two rockets and mobile launch equipment. A crew of 11 was required for the launch of each missile, preparations for which took six hours, including 15 minutes for guidance system programming. After preparation, a rocket could stand ready to fire for 24 hours before it required defueling and renewed preparations. The R-2 was launched operationally in temperatures ranging from to, withstanding wind speeds of up to . [8]

The first two R-2 military units, the 54th and 56th brigades, were formed for the 1952 test launches. Starting in 1953, divisions were deployed to Zhitomir; Kolomiya;, Novgorod Oblast; Kamyshin, Volgograd Oblast; Siauliai, Lithuanian SSR; Dzhambul, Kazakh SSR; and Ordzhonikidze, and in the Far East.[8] The R-2 was retired from active service in 1962.[1]

Like the R-1, the R-2's utility was limited by the smallness of its warhead. The Geran (Eng: Geranium) radiological warhead, which would disperse radioactive liquid as toxic rain around the impact point, was proposed for use with the R-2. However, this warhead was ultimately never developed.[4]

The West obtained its first photographs of the R-2 (which they designated SS-2 "Sibling") in December 1959 when aerial surveillance returned images from rockets deployed at Kapustin Yar. These confirmed the dimensions of the rocket and revealed much information about the organization of the RVGK brigades.[9]

R-2A sounding rocket

The R-2 had a maximum altitude of, a two-fold improvement over that of the R-1. This made it a much more desirable vehicle for probing outer space. OKB-1 developed a draft plan for the R-2A sounding rocket in 1956. This new vehicle would loft a capsule housing two dogs and also two strap-on pods for scientific experiments.[2]

A first series of five launches, each carrying a pair of dogs, was carried out from 16 May 1957 through 9 September. During these flights, the animals experienced several minutes of weightlessness. Just two months later, Sputnik 2 was launched into orbit containing a canine passenger inside a capsule derived from the one used on the R-2A.[2] Sounding rocket flights continued through 1960 with biological and ionospheric packages.[10]

Originally, OKB-1 also worked on an adaptation of the R-2A capsule for human test flights. This was on the assumption that a human orbital flight would not be feasible until the mid '60s. With the completion of the R-7 Semyorka ICBM, however, it became clear that a crewed mission into orbit would happen much sooner, and the plan was abandoned.[2]

Chinese version (Dongfeng 1)

On 6 December 1957 an agreement was signed to license production of the R-2 to China,[8] which was produced as the Dongfeng 1.[11] In August 1958, a group of OKB-1 senior engineers and several R-2 missiles were sent to China in aid of that country's fledgling ballistic missile program.[2] This team was sent home 2 August 1960 amidst increased tension between the Soviet Union and China.[11]

Operators

See also

References

  1. Book: Podvig . Pavel . 2004 . Russian Strategic Nuclear Forces . MIT Press . 119 . 9780262661812.
  2. Book: Challenge to Apollo: The Soviet Union and the Space Race, 1945–1974. Asif A. Siddiqi. NASA. Washington D.C.. 1001823253. 18 December 2020. 16 September 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20080916023444/https://history.nasa.gov/SP-4408pt1.pdf. live.
  3. Web site: R1. Wade. Marc. Encyclopedia Astronautica. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120922211630/http://www.astronautix.com/lvs/r1.htm. 2012-09-22. 2020-04-19.
  4. Book: Boris Chertok. Rockets and People, Volume II: Creating a Rocket Industry. NASA. Washington D.C.. June 2006. 946818748.
  5. Book: Zaloga, Steven J.. V-2 Ballistic Missile 1942–52. 20 March 2013. Bloomsbury Publishing. 978-1-4728-0299-6. 41.
  6. Book: Zaloga, Steven J.. https://books.google.com/books?id=8X-HCwAAQBAJ&pg=PT6. Scud Ballistic Missile and Launch Systems 1955–2005. 20 March 2013. Bloomsbury Publishing. 978-1-4728-0306-1. 6–15. R-11: the Scud A.
  7. Web site: Zak . Anatoly . The R-2 ballistic missile . Russian Space Web . 21 December 2023.
  8. Web site: R2. Wade. Marc. Encyclopedia Astronautica. 2022-11-14.
  9. Web site: THE SOVIET LAND-BASED BALLISTIC MISSILE PROGRAM 1945-1972 An Historical Overview. 24 November 2022.
  10. Web site: R-2A. Mark Wade. Encyclopedia Astronautica. 24 November 2022.
  11. Web site: History of Dong Feng (East Wind) Chinese Ballistic Missiles. Mike Gruntman. 2004. 24 November 2022.