Brazil in Space
Hello reader!
It follows an article published in on the day (03/26), in
the website “The Space Review", presenting an analysis on the Brazilian Space Activities.
Duda Falcão
Brazil in Space
by Dwayne A. Day
Monday, March 26, 2012
The aftermath of an August 2003 explosion of a
VLS rocket at
Baazil’s Alcântara launch site, which killed
21 people. (credit: Agência Brasil,
via Wikipedia)
|
The much-derided James Bond movie Moonraker does have its
good moments. One of them occurs about two thirds of the way through the film
when Bond discovers that the homicidal billionaire with his own space shuttle
fleet has built a series of underground launch pads deep in the Brazilian rain
forest. Ironically, in the movie, Brazil had a space program, they just didn’t
know about it.
In reality, Brazil has long had its own on-again,
off-again space program, periodically leading to articles claiming that the
country is about to make a new push to develop its indigenous capabilities.
After awhile nothing happens, and then nothing continues to happen, and
eventually most people forget that Brazil has or had a space program. Evidence
of this—and a more substantial link between espionage and secretive launch
bases—can be found in a newly-declassified November 1982 CIA report on Brazil’s
space program, which CIA analysts believed was about to make a major next step
with the development of Brazil’s own indigenous space launch vehicle.
The report was apparently
prompted by a Brazilian
decision to embark “on
an ambitious aerospace
program intended to
make it self-sufficient in
space technology and
capable of producing,
launching, and maintaining
a satellite in space.”
The report, simply titled “Brazilian
Space Launch Vehicle Program,” was produced by the National
Photographic Interpretation Center, which at the time was run by the CIA and
colloquially referred to as NPIC, or “enpic.” NPIC was responsible for
analyzing satellite and aircraft reconnaissance photography and producing
assessments of what they saw. Although the report was only 14 pages long, it
was intended to be a comprehensive overview of everything from industrial
facilities to launch ranges to the launch vehicles themselves. By this time
NPIC analysts were encouraged to branch beyond using only imagery to produce
their assessments, and thus the NPIC report references several open source
articles about Brazil’s efforts, producing a more complete view of the
country’s space projects. There is no evidence that the US intelligence
community looked at Brazil’s program with any alarm, however.
The report was apparently prompted by a Brazilian
decision to embark “on an ambitious aerospace program intended to make it
self-sufficient in space technology and capable of producing, launching, and
maintaining a satellite in space.” The country had started a number of plans
and programs expanding existing facilities and constructing new test and launch
facilities, according to the report. Brazil’s plans at the time were to launch
“a new-generation sounding rocket (Sonda IV) by 1983 and the launch of a
four-stage space launch vehicle (SLV) by 1988.”
Brazil’s space program began in 1961 and resulted in the
successful development of the Sonda I, II and III sounding rockets, primarily
used for meteorological research. The Sonda III was capable of transporting a
50-kilogram payload to 500 kilometers altitude. The Sonda IV was planned to be
capable of launching 300 kilograms to 1,000 kilometers. All were solid
propellant rockets.
The proposed space launch vehicle was to have four stages
and able to launch a 120-kilogram satellite to a 500–800 kilometer orbit. Its
first launch was scheduled for 1988 and would be followed by three additional
launches over the next five years, although that schedule had already slipped.
The CIA predicted that the first stage would consist of a cluster of four to
five Sonda IV rockets, with the second and third stages made of other Sonda
rockets. This was, in fact, similar to the approach taken by Iraq in developing
its space launch vehicle in the late 1980s, although Iraq used clustered
liquid-fueled rockets. (See: “Saddam’s
space program,” The Space Review, October 26, 2009.)
Initially, Brazil had hoped to jointly develop a
liquid-fueled launch vehicle with France, but negotiations with the French
broke down over technology transfer issues. Brazil had to go it alone.
Brazil’s launch area was the Barreira do Inferno Rocket
Range on the Atlantic Coast. It opened in 1965 and the 1982 report stated that
over 2,000 domestic and foreign-built rockets had been launched from there.
These included not only the Sondas, but also the Nike-Ajax, Nike-Cajun,
Nike-Iroquois, Javelin, Aerobee, and the Black Brant IV.
The
Brazilian government had publicly stated that the launch range was insufficient
for the space launch vehicle and had therefore acquired a 500-square-kilometer
area near Sao Luis Bay. This was named the Alcântara Space Launch Facility and
plans were for it to become operational in 1988. American reconnaissance
satellites had not spotted any construction at the site by the time the report
was written.
Because Alcântara
is less
than three
degrees from
the equator, it
benefits
from the Earth’s
rotation
compared to sites
farther
away. But
geography is
not destiny when
it comes
to space
launches.
That was nearly 30 years ago.
The first launch at Alcântara did not take place until
1990, when the Brazilians fired a Sonda II sounding rocket. As the NPIC
analysts predicted, the space launch vehicle—which the Brazilians named the
Veículo Lançador de Satélites, or VLS—slipped its schedule. Limited tests of
the first stage took place in 1985 and 1989. But the first full-scale test did
not take place until December 1997—nine years later than planned—and ended in
failure. A second launch took place in December 1999 and also failed.
But the major setback occurred just days before the third
test launch scheduled for August 2003. The VLS rocket exploded on the pad, killing 21 people.
Although the VLS is still supposedly an active program, after nearly nine years
with no launch attempts it is difficult to believe that it is going to make any
progress.
Late last
year Brazil and Ukraine announced that a joint venture that had been initiated
in 2003 was finally resuming. The plan is to launch a Ukrainian Cyclone-4
rocket from Alcântara in 2013. Because Alcântara is less than three degrees
from the equator, it benefits from the Earth’s rotation compared to sites
farther away. But geography is not destiny when it comes to space launches. If
there is a CIA intelligence analyst responsible for keeping tabs on Brazil’s
space program today, he probably has a lot of time on his hands.
Source: http://www.thespacereview.com/
That was enjoyable to read, thanks for posting it.
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