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launch vehicle
(redirected from Space launch vehicle)

   Also found in: Wikipedia 0.02 sec.

launch vehicle

Rocket system that boosts a spacecraft into Earth orbit or beyond Earth's gravitational pull. A wide variety of launch vehicles have been used to lift payloads ranging from satellites weighing a few pounds (or kilograms) to large modular components of space stations. Most launch vehicles are expendable (one-use) systems; many early ones were derived from intercontinental ballistic missiles (see ICBM). The Saturn V, which launched the spacecraft that carried humans to the Moon (see Apollo), had three stages (see staged rocket). The U.S. space shuttle system (from 1981) represents a significant departure from expendable launch vehicles in that it is partially reusable—its manned orbiting component is designed for numerous flights, and its solid rocket boosters can be recovered and refurbished.


launch vehicle [′lȯnch ‚ve·ə·kəl]
(aerospace engineering)
A rocket or other vehicle used to launch a probe, satellite, or the like. Also known as booster.


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In December, the wing used a Minotaur I space launch vehicle based upon old Minuteman ICBM motors, to send the experimental satellite, TacSat-2, into orbit from Wallops Island, Va.
Following this years theme, Pulling Together Toward the 21st Century, a model of NASA's X-33, designed to be the first reusable space launch vehicle, was also featured.
Orbital's GMD boost vehicle is a three-stage rocket based on flight-proven hardware that has flown over 50 times on missions carried out by the company's Pegasus([R]), Taurus([R]) and Minotaur space launch vehicles.
 
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