Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Common Core Booster

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Country of origin
  
United States

Diameter
  
3.81 metres (12.5 ft)

Common Core Booster

Manufacturer
  
Lockheed Martin (1998–2006) United Launch Alliance (2006—)

Used on
  
Atlas V (stage 1) Atlas V Heavy (boosters, cancelled) GX (stage 1, cancelled)

Height
  
32.46 metres (106.5 ft)

Gross mass
  
306,914 kilograms (676,630 lb)

The Common Core Booster (CCB) is an American rocket stage, which is used as the first stage of the Atlas V rocket as part of its modular design. It was also intended that two additional CCBs would be used as boosters on the Atlas V Heavy, however this configuration has not been developed. Use of a Common Core Booster as the first stage of the Japanese GX was also planned; however, this programme was cancelled in late 2009.

The Common Core Booster is 32.46 metres (106.5 ft) long, has a diameter of 3.81 metres (12.5 ft) and is powered by a single RD-180 engine burning RP-1 and liquid oxygen.

Testing of the CCB and its RD-180 engines was conducted in the United States at the Marshall Space Flight Center, and in Khimki, Russia. The test programme concluded with the final engine test in December 2001. The first launch of a Common Core Booster was the maiden flight of the Atlas V, which was launched from Space Launch Complex 41 at the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on 21 August 2002. As of January 2015, the Atlas V has made fifty-two flights, all of which have used a single Common Core Booster.

References

Common Core Booster Wikipedia