United Launch Alliance
Successfully Launches Critical National Security
Mission direct to GEO
Dec. 7, 2021
A United Launch Alliance (ULA)
Atlas V rocket carrying the Space Test Program
(STP)-3 mission for the U.S. Space Force's Space
Systems Command lifted off on Dec. 7 at 5:19 a.m.
EST from Space Launch Complex-41 at Cape Canaveral
Space Force Station. To date ULA has launched 147
times with 100 percent mission success. STP-3 marked
ULA's longest duration mission at seven hours and 10
minutes until spacecraft separation.
"Today's launch is a testament
to why the ULA team continually serves as our
nation's most reliable and successful launch
provider for our country's most critical space
assets," said Gary Wentz, ULA vice president of
Government and Commercial Programs. "Thank you to
our U.S. Space Force, NASA and industry teammates
for their tremendous partnership in successfully
delivering STP-3 to orbit."
Producing more than two and a
half million pounds of thrust at liftoff, the Atlas
V 551 rocket is the most powerful in the Atlas V
fleet. This mission debuted several unique
capabilities including the first Out of Autoclave
(OOA) Payload Fairing, In-Flight power system and
GPS Enhanced Navigation. OOA manufacturing allows
for a more efficient production process, lower cost
and lower system mass while maintaining the same
level of reliability and quality. The In-Flight
power system ensures the Space Test Program
Satellite-6 (STPSat-6) and Long Duration Propulsive
Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle (EELV) Secondary
Payload Adapter (ESPA)-1, (LDPE-1) spacecraft had
fully charged batteries when deployed into
geosynchronous orbit. The GPS Enhanced Navigation
Development Project provides increased spacecraft
insertion accuracies a critical addition to this
direct to long-duration mission. The booster rate
gyro (BoRG) unit is a low-cost alternative rate
gyroscope package. The design utilizes simplified
processing and commercial inertial measurement units
built into a triple-channel architecture to
significantly reduce unit cost and weight.
The mission launched on an
Atlas V 551 configuration rocket, that included a
5.4 meter payload fairing. The Atlas booster for
this mission was powered by the RD AMROSS RD-180
engine. Aerojet Rocketdyne provided the RL10C-1
engine for the Centaur upper stage and Northrop
Grumman provided the five Graphite Epoxy Motors
(GEM) 63 solid rocket boosters.
This was the 90th launch of the
Atlas V rocket. ULA's next launch is the USSF-8
mission for the U.S. Space Force, planned for
January 21, 2022, from Cape Canaveral Space Force
Station, Fla.
With more than a century of
combined heritage, ULA is the nation's most
experienced and reliable launch service provider.
ULA has successfully delivered more than 145
missions to orbit that aid meteorologists in
tracking severe weather, unlock the mysteries of our
solar system, provide critical capabilities for
troops in the field, deliver cutting-edge commercial
services and enable GPS navigation.