Mesquito

The Mesquito sounding rocket
FunctionSounding rocket
ManufacturerNSROC
Country of originUnited States
Launch history
StatusActive
Launch sitesLC-2, Wallops Island
Total launches2
Success(es)1
Failure(s)1
First flight6 May 2008
[edit on Wikidata]

The Mesquito is an American sounding rocket vehicle developed for the NASA Sounding Rocket Program on Wallops Island, Virginia. The Mesquito was developed to provide rocket-borne measurements of the mesospheric region of the upper atmosphere.[1] An area of great science interest is in the 82–95 km region, where the conventional understanding of atmospherics physics is being challenged.

The Mesquito is a two-stage sounding rocket using a 9-inch-diameter (230 mm) solid propellant rocket motor as the first-stage propulsion device. The non-propulsive second-stage dart contains a free-flying structural body that includes an avionics suite and an experiment space with interface.

The maiden flight occurred on 6 May, 2008, from LC-2 at the Wallops Flight Facility.

Launch history

Date Time (GMT) S/N Mission Outcome Remarks
2008-05-06 18:00-20:00 12.065 Test Success Maiden flight[2]
2008-05-07 18:00-20:00 12.066 Test Failure Loss of control following burnout[2]

References

  1. ^ "Mesquito". www.astronautix.com. Retrieved 2023-03-07.
  2. ^ a b Flowers, Betty; Rebecca Powell (2008-05-12). "Inside Wallops" (PDF). Volume XX-08, Issue 17. NASA Wallops Flight Facility. p. 2. Retrieved 2008-05-15.
  • "Sounding Rocket Technology Development". NASA. Archived from the original on 2008-05-20.


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