Saturn C-2

Not to be confused with Saturn II
Saturn C-2
Function Launch vehicle for Project Horizon and Apollo
Country of origin United States
Size
Height 224.6 feet (68.5 m) (w/o payload)
Diameter 21.4 feet (6.5 m)
Mass 1,367,000 pounds (620,000 kg) gross (to LEO)
Capacity
Payload to LEO 47,300 pounds (21,500 kg)
Payload to Moon 14,900 pounds (6,800 kg)
Associated rockets
Family Saturn
Launch history
Status Study, not developed
Launch sites Kennedy Space Center
First stage - S-I
Length 80.3 feet (24.5 m)
Diameter 21.4 feet (6.5 m)
Empty mass 99,800 pounds (45,300 kg)
Gross mass 953,900 pounds (432,700 kg)
Engines 8 H-1
Thrust 1,500,000 pounds-force (6,700 kN)
Specific impulse 289 secs
Burn time 150 seconds
Fuel RP-1/LOX
Second stage - S-II[1]
Length 74.0 feet (22.6 m)
Diameter 21.6 feet (6.6 m)
Empty mass 30,000 pounds (14,000 kg)
Gross mass 220,000 pounds (100,000 kg)
Engines 4 J-2
Thrust 800,000 pounds-force (3,600 kN)
Specific impulse 300 sec
Burn time 100 seconds
Fuel LH2/LOX
Third stage - S-IV
Length 40.0 feet (12.2 m)
Diameter 18.0 feet (5.5 m)
Empty mass 11,500 pounds (5,200 kg)
Gross mass 111,500 pounds (50,600 kg)
Engines 6 RL10
Thrust 90,000 pounds-force (400 kN)
Specific impulse 410 secs
Burn time 482 seconds
Fuel LH2/LOX
Fourth stage - S-V (Centaur-C)
Length 30.0 feet (9.1 m)
Diameter 10.0 feet (3.0 m)
Empty mass 4,400 pounds (2,000 kg)
Gross mass 34,300 pounds (15,600 kg)
Engines 2 RL10
Thrust 30,000 pounds-force (130 kN)
Specific impulse 410 secs
Burn time 430 seconds
Fuel LH2/LOX

The Saturn C-2 was the second rocket in the Saturn C series studied from 1959 to 1962. The design was for a four-stage launch vehicle that could launch 21,500 kg (47,300 lb) to low Earth orbit and send 6,800 kg (14,900 lb) to the Moon via Trans-Lunar Injection.[2]
The C-2 design concept was for a proposed manned circumlunar flight and the Earth orbit rendezvous (EOR) missions. It was initially considered for the Apollo lunar landing at the earliest possible date (1967).

Launch vehicle requirements

On September 30, 1960 the fourth meeting of the Space Exploration Program Council was held at NASA Headquarters. The results of a study on Saturn development and utilization was presented by the Ad Hoc Saturn Study Committee.
Objectives of the study were to determine:

Since no change in the NASA FY1962 budget was contemplated., the Committee recommended that the Saturn C-2 development should proceed on schedule (S-II stage contract in FY 1962, with first flight in 1965).[3]

The C-2 would be essential for Apollo manned circumlunar missions, lunar unmanned exploration, Mars and Venus orbiters and capsule landers, probes to other planets and out-of-ecliptic, and for orbital starting of nuclear upper stages. During a discussion on the Saturn program, several major problems were brought up:

Changing configurations

During 1961 Saturn C-x configurations seemed to change month by month. In February 1961, the C-2 design finalized as a three-stage vehicle for Earth-escape missions, using an S-II second stage. It was calculated that 15 launches and rendezvous of the C-2 would have been required to assemble a lunar spacecraft in Low Earth orbit. By May 1961, a more powerful vehicle was desired for circumlunar missions, hence the C-2 was dropped in favor of the Saturn C-3. Further development of the C-2 vehicle was cancelled on 23 June 1961.[4]

Launch vehicle design

The original Saturn C-2 design (1959-1960) was a four-stage launch vehicle, using an S-I first stage using eight Rocketdyne H-1 engines, later flown on the Saturn I. The Army's original design used the S-III stage with two J-2 engines as the second stage; after the Saturn program was transferred to NASA, the second stage was replaced with an S-II second stage using four J-2 engines. The S-III stage would have been added atop the S-II, to convert the C-2 into the five-stage Saturn C-3. Later, a fifth J-2 engine was added to the S-II stage to be used on the Saturn C-5, which eventually was developed as the Saturn V launch vehicle.

The S-IV, later flown on the Saturn I, was to serve as the third C-2 stage and fourth C-3 stage; and an S-V Centaur (rocket stage) would be the fourth C-2 stage. While this S-V/Centaur stage would never fly on any Saturn rockets, it would be used on Atlas and Titan launch vehicles. The Centaur is still in use on the Atlas V and the derived Delta Cryogenic Second Stage (DCSS) on the Delta IV. The Advanced Common Evolved Stage is the latest proposed derivative as an upper stage replacement for the Atlas V, Delta IV, and Space Launch System.

References

Inline citations
  1. This is not the larger S-II stage used on the Saturn V, which added a fifth J-2 engine.
  2. "Saturn C-2". Astronautix.com. Retrieved 5 March 2013.
  3. Bilsten, Roger E. (1980). Stages to Saturn. NASA SP-4206. pp. 48–53.
  4. Bilsten, Roger E. (1980). Stages to Saturn. NASA SP-4206. p. 58.
Bibliography

 This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

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