Super heavy-lift launch vehicle


A super heavy-lift launch vehicle is a rocket that can lift a payload of to low Earth orbit according to the United States, and more than by Russia. It is the most capable launch vehicle classification by mass to orbit, exceeding that of the heavy-lift launch vehicle classification. Crewed lunar and interplanetary missions typically depend on super-heavy launch vehicles.
Only 14 such payloads were successfully launched before 2022: 12 as part of the Apollo program before 1972 and two Energia launches, in 1987 and 1988.
Several super heavy-lift launch vehicle concepts were produced in the 1960s, including the Sea Dragon. During the Space Race, the Saturn V and N1 were built by the United States and Soviet Union, respectively. After the Saturn V's successful Apollo program and the N1's failures, the Soviets' Energia launched twice in the 1980s, once bearing the Buran spaceplane. The next two decades saw multiple concepts drawn out once again, most notably Space Shuttle-derived vehicles and Rus-M, but none were built.
In the 21st century, super heavy-lift launch vehicles began to receive interest once again, leading to the development & launch of the Falcon Heavy, the Space Launch System, and Starship, as well as the development of the Long March 9 and 10, Yenisei, NGLV, and New Glenn 9x4 rockets.

Flown vehicles

Retired

Operational

Under development

Unsuccessfully flown

  • The N1 was a three-stage super heavy lift launch vehicle developed in the Soviet Union from 1965 to 1974. It was the Soviet counterpart to the Saturn V, however all four test flights of the vehicle ended in flight failure. For lunar missions, it would carry the L3 crewed lunar payload into Low Earth Orbit, which had an additional two stages, a Soyuz 7K-LOK as a mothership and an LK lunar lander that would be used for crewed lunar landings. Its Block A first stage held the record for the most thrust of any rocket stage built until it was superseded by the Super Heavy booster on its first flight.

Proposed designs

Chinese proposals

Long March 10 was first proposed in 2018 as a concept for the Chinese Lunar Exploration Program. Long March 9, an over to LEO capable rocket was proposed in 2018 by China, with plans to launch the rocket by 2028. The length of the Long March-9 will exceed 114 meters, and the rocket would have a core stage with a diameter of 10 meters. Long March 9 is expected to carry a payload of over 50 tonnes for Earth-Moon transfer orbit. Development was approved in 2021.

Russian proposals

Yenisei, a super heavy-lift launch vehicle using existing components instead of pushing the less-powerful Angara A5V project, was proposed by Russia's RSC Energia in August 2016.
A revival of the Energia booster was proposed in 2016, also to avoid pushing the Angara project. If developed, this vehicle could allow Russia to launch missions towards establishing a permanent Moon base with simpler logistics, launching one or two 80-to-160-tonne super-heavy rockets instead of four 40-tonne Angara A5Vs implying quick-sequence launches and multiple in-orbit rendezvous. In February 2018, the КРК СТК design was updated to lift at least 90 tonnes to LEO and 20 tonnes to lunar polar orbit, and to be launched from Vostochny Cosmodrome. The first flight is scheduled for 2028, with Moon landings starting in 2030. This proposal may have been at least paused.

US proposals

Blue Origin has plans for a project following their New Glenn rocket, termed New Armstrong, which some media sources have speculated will be a larger launch vehicle.

Cancelled designs

Numerous super-heavy-lift vehicles have been proposed and received various levels of development prior to their cancellation.
As part of the Soviet crewed lunar project to compete with Apollo/Saturn V, the N1 rocket was secretly designed with a payload capacity of. Four test vehicles were launched from 1969 to 1972, but all failed shortly after lift-off. The program was suspended in May 1974 and formally cancelled in March 1976. The Soviet UR-700 rocket design concept competed against the N1, but was never developed. In the concept, it was to have had a payload capacity of up to to low earth orbit.
During project Aelita, the Soviets were developing a way to beat the Americans to Mars. They designed the UR-700A, a nuclear powered variant of the UR-700, and UR-700M, a LOx/Kerosene variant to assemble the MK-700 spacecraft in earth orbit in two launches. The UR-700M would have a payload capacity of. The only Universal Rocket pass the design phase was the UR-500 while the N1 was selected to be the Soviets' HLV for lunar and Martian missions.
The UR-900, proposed in 1969, would have had a payload capacity of to low earth orbit. It never left the drawing board.
The General Dynamics Nexus was proposed in the 1960s as a fully reusable successor to the Saturn V rocket, having the capacity of transporting up to to orbit.
The American Saturn MLV family of rockets was proposed in 1965 by NASA as successors to the Saturn V rocket. It would have been able to carry up to to low Earth orbit. The Nova designs were also studied by NASA before the agency chose the Saturn V in the early 1960s Nova was cancelled in 1964 and had reusable variants.
Based on the recommendations of the Stafford Synthesis report, First Lunar Outpost would have relied on a massive Saturn-derived launch vehicle known as the Comet HLLV. The Comet would have been capable of injecting 254.4 t into LEO and 97.6 t on a Trans-Lunar Injection making it one of the most capable vehicles ever designed. FLO was cancelled during the design process along with the rest of the Space Exploration Initiative.
The U.S. Ares V for the Constellation program was intended to reuse many elements of the Space Shuttle program, both on the ground and flight hardware, to save costs. The Ares V was designed to carry and was cancelled in 2010.
The Shuttle-Derived Heavy Lift Launch Vehicle was an alternate super heavy-lift launch vehicle proposal for the NASA Constellation program, proposed in 2009.
A 1962 design proposal, Sea Dragon, called for an enormous tall, sea-launched rocket capable of lifting to low Earth orbit. Although preliminary engineering of the design was done by TRW, the project never moved forward due to the closing of NASA's Future Projects Branch.
The Rus-M was a proposed Russian family of launchers whose development began in 2009. It would have had two super heavy variants: one able to lift 50–60 tons, and another able to lift 130–150 tons.
SpaceX Interplanetary Transport System was a diameter launch vehicle concept unveiled in 2016. The payload capability was to be in an expendable configuration or in a reusable configuration. In 2017, the design evolved into a diameter concept Big Falcon Rocket, which became the SpaceX Starship.