Spaceport

A spaceport ( English Spaceport , literally "space port") is a launch site from which launch vehicles with spacecraft take off. The payloads carried are satellites , space probes or spaceships . Often there are also launch sites for sounding rockets and / or for military missiles on the same site . Space stations on the territory of the former Soviet Union and in China are also known as the cosmodrome (from Kosmos ).
Site conditions
For launches in equatorial or near-equatorial orbits, the launch site should be as close as possible to the equator : Due to the rotation of the earth , the rocket already has the maximum base speed mediated on the earth's surface and does not have to accelerate as much in order to achieve the overall speed required in orbit. In addition, the location makes it easier to reach the desired orbit. For takeoffs in polar orbits , however, locations close to the polar are cheaper, such as the Plesezk Cosmodrome in Russia and the Pacific Spaceport Complex - Alaska .
A spaceport should be located in a politically stable state, as its construction requires large investments . It should be located away from densely populated areas and border an ocean or an area that is as sparsely populated as possible in an easterly, northerly and / or southerly direction , because rocket launches always take place in one of these directions (for the reason mentioned above). Otherwise people in the immediate vicinity could be endangered by falling debris and poisonous fuel residues in the event of false starts , and at greater distance also by systematically separated boosters and first stages .
Example: Russian cosmodromes
The Russian cosmodromes are at a disadvantage due to their far northerly location when taking off into equatorial orbits, as additional fuel has to be used for maneuvers to the target orbit. Therefore, most of the Russian rocket launches are from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan . Ukrainian rockets were partly launched from a drilling platform near the equator that is to be used for Russian rockets in the future (→ Sea Launch ).
Example: Kourou

The European spaceport Center Spatial Guyanais in Kourou has the most favorable location for equatorial launches of similar facilities worldwide. It is located in the politically stable French overseas department of French Guiana in northern South America and very close to the equator. The region is very sparsely populated and borders the Atlantic Ocean in the northeast . Since the spaceport is directly adjacent to an extensive forest area, it can also be expanded without any problems. Although Kourou has a tropical climate , it is spared most of the Atlantic storms. A disadvantage of Kourou is the great distance from the European production sites of the rockets, which can, however, be transported there by sea due to the coastal location of the launch site.
Space stations in Europe
So far, there is no spaceport on the continental EU . The currently only European rocket operator , Arianespace, will take off from Kourou instead.
In the Scottish Highlands , the Sutherland Spaceport on the A 'Mhòine peninsula has been planned since 2018 . The British-Danish Prime missile is scheduled to start from there at the end of 2021 at the earliest ; the launch site for the US-New Zealand rocket Electron is also planned. A launch site for the Prime is also planned on the Azores island of Santa Maria .
Due to its inland location, Germany is unsuitable as a location for a spaceport. Instead, locations in Sweden and Norway are being discussed for the Bavarian Spectrum launch vehicle .
Manned space travel
So far, four space stations were for manned space flights used: Run by Russia Baikonur cosmodrome, the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station (CCAFS; future Cape Canaveral Space Force Station , CCSFS) in Florida , the north adjoining Kennedy Space Center (KSC) of NASA and the Jiuquan Cosmodrome in northern China.
- In 1961, Vostok 1 was the first person to set off from Baikonur into space. All manned Russian space flights begin there to this day.
- The first Americans flew into space from the CCAFS with the Mercury spaceships . The SpaceX spaceship Crew Dragon is expected to bring astronauts from the CCSFS to the International Space Station (ISS) from 2021 .
- The KSC was the starting point for all Apollo and Space Shuttle flights and also served as a shuttle landing pad . The first SpaceX spaceship Crew Dragon took off there in May 2020 , flights with the Starship are to follow.
- The Chinese Shenzhou spaceship takes off from Jiuquan .
The Indian Satish Dhawan Space Center is planned as the fifth station for manned orbital space flights . Manned suborbital flights are planned with the SpaceShipTwo from Spaceport America in New Mexico and with the New Shepard rocket from Corn Ranch in Texas .
List of space stations
Orbital space stations
These facilities have already launched launch vehicles in earth orbits, or attempts have been made or are specifically planned. The launch sites with a gray background are currently not used as a spaceport.
Take-off sites for carrier aircraft
Carrier aircraft with the orbital rockets Pegasus or LauncherOne have taken off from these airports or airfields , or take-offs are planned.
Rocket launch sites with attached airfield (details see above):
- Cape Canaveral Air Force Station (Pegasus since February 9, 1993)
- Kennedy Space Center (LauncherOne planned)
- Kwajalein Missile Range (Pegasus since October 9, 2000)
- Vandenberg Air Force Base (Pegasus since June 27, 1994)
- Wallops Flight Facility (Pegasus since November 4, 1996)
Pure airfields:
Surname | Country, region / province | operator | Coordinates | First orbital launch | comment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Newquay Cornwall Airport |
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Cornwall | 50 ° 26 ' N , 5 ° 0' W. | LauncherOne (planned) | |
Cecil Air and Space Port |
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Florida | 30 ° 13 ′ N , 81 ° 53 ′ W. | 2021? | Ravn (planned) |
Edwards Air Force Base |
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US Air Force | 34 ° 54 ' N , 117 ° 53' W | Apr 5, 1990 | Pegasus until 1994 |
Andersen Air Force Base |
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US Air Force | 13 ° 15 ' N , 144 ° 56' E | 2020 (planned) | LauncherOne (planned) |
Antonio B. Won Pat Airport |
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Guam | 13 ° 29 ' N , 144 ° 48' E | 2020? | LauncherOne (planned) |
Mojave Air & Space Port |
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Virgin Orbit | 35 ° 4 ′ N , 118 ° 9 ′ W. | 2020 (planned) | LauncherOne (planned) |
(The places with a gray background are not yet completed or are no longer used for orbital launches.)
Suborbital space stations
These facilities are used for launching suborbital spaceships.
Surname | Country, region / province | operator | Coordinates | First space flight | comment |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Corn Ranch |
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Blue Origin | 31 ° 25 ′ N , 104 ° 46 ′ W. | 23 Nov 2015 | New Shepard |
Mojave Air & Space Port |
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Virgin Orbit | 35 ° 4 ′ N , 118 ° 9 ′ W. | June 21, 2004 | SpaceShipOne , SpaceShipTwo |
Spaceport America |
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Virgin Galactic | 32 ° 59 ′ N , 106 ° 59 ′ W | SpaceShipTwo (planned) |
Map of the space ports
equator
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See also
literature
- Ralf Butscher: Large train station on the equator . In: Bild der Wissenschaft , issue 1/2005, pp. 88–93 (2005), ISSN 0006-2375
- Erik Seedhouse: Spaceports Around the World, A Global Growth Industry. Springer, Cham 2017, ISBN 978-3-319-46845-7 .
- Stella Tkatchova: Spaceports in: Emerging Space Markets. Springer, Berlin 2017, ISBN 978-3-662-55667-2 , pp. 119ff.
Web links
- Orbital rocket launch sites in the Encyclopedia Astronautica (English)
- Map of all orbital and suborbital rocket launch sites (PDF, 6 MB), September 2019, Bryce space and technology (English)
Individual evidence
- ↑ a b c Ulf von Rauchhaupt: Do you know where the stars are? In: Frankfurter Allgemeine Sonntagszeitung from December 29, 2013, p. 61.
- ^ The World Bank: Country Data Report for French Guiana, 1996-2014. (PDF; 860 kB) July 14, 2016, accessed on June 25, 2017 (English).
- ^ Launching Satellites , EUMETSAT , accessed December 29, 2013.
- ^ Jeff Foust: Lockheed Martin, Orbex to launch from new British spaceport. In: Spacenews. July 16, 2018, accessed February 16, 2019 .
- ↑ AZµL - Azores Micro Launcher Deimos and Orbex. (PDF) November 6, 2018, accessed February 16, 2019 .
- ↑ Munich start-up wants to send rocket into space. In: BR24 . January 23, 2019, accessed June 26, 2019 .
- ^ Space Daily: Southern Launch Prepares for Lift Off In South Australia. July 19, 2020, accessed on July 28, 2020 : "Construction of the Whaler's Way Orbital Launch Complex is scheduled to be completed ahead of the first launch in 2021"
- ↑ Upcoming ELaNa CubeSat Launches. NASA, accessed January 30, 2020 .
- ↑ Astro Digital Ignis Orbital Debris Assessment Report (ODAR) , page 5: "Launch Vehicles and Launch Sites: LauncherOne and Cosmic Girl, Guam International Airport, Guam, United States."