NASA Sounding Rocket Program
The NASA Sounding Rocket Program is a NASA run program of sounding rockets which has been operating since 1959. The missions carried out by this program are primarily used for scientific research, particularly low gravity and material based research. NASA's sounding rocket program is commonly used by colleges and universities for upper atmosphere research.
Program
In 1965, NASA's cost of a sounding rocket system was $5,000 to $150,000, using combinations of stage motors from the Aerobee, Hercules M5E1, and Thiokol Apache.The program was consolidated at the Wallops Flight Facility in the 1980s and uses extra military solid rocket motors. Rockets are frequently launched from fixed facilities at Wallops, the Navy's White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico, the Poker Flat Research Range in Alaska, Kwajalein, Marshall Islands, Pacific Missile Range Facility in Barking Sands, Hawaii, and Andøya Rocket Range, Norway. The rockets are categorized as "Significant Military Equipment" for ITAR.
Propulsion
Rockets in use include single-stage or combinations of:- Black Brant family, 17.26" diameter
- Improved Orion surplus motor, 14" diameter
- Terrier/Hercules MK12 or MK70 surplus motors, 18" diameter
- Oriole motor
- Magellan Aerospace Nihka exo-atomospheric motor, 17.26" diameter, 192,878 pound-seconds impulse
- Thiokol Improved Malemute TU-758 surplus motor, 16" diameter
- Hercules Talos surplus motor, 30.1" diameter
Launches
PolarNOx
The PolarNOx mission was a set of experimental launches used to measure the nitric oxide present in the upper atmosphere that is produced by auroras.DEUCE
The DEUCE mission was planned to obtain scientific data about the IGM. This failed however due to problems with the attitude control system.On 11 July 2022 a Black Brant IX rocket from Arnhem Space Centre launched the fourth DEUCE ultraviolet astronomy mission following flights in 2017, 2018, and 2020 for NASA. The suborbital flight had apogee of and was successful.