The Launch of the Iranian Kavoshgar Rocket
The Launch of the Iranian Kavoshgar Rocket
by Yiftah Shapir
On February 4, Iran launched a sounding rocket into space. The launch was part of the inauguration of the Iranian Space Center and received extensive coverage in the Iranian media, which focused on Iran’s intention this summer to launch by its own means a satellite wholly developed by Iranian industry.
The Sounding Rocket
The rocket
launched at the Space Research Center was dubbed Kavoshgar-1
(“Explorer”) and carried scientific instrumentation.
About two weeks after the launch, it was reported that the
rocket had two stages – one burned for 90-100 seconds and
the other for 300 seconds. It reached an altitude of 200
km. and then returned to earth by parachute. Its payload
included instrumentation that signaled geographic location,
wind conditions, air pressure, temperature, etc. Iranian
spokesmen explained that two more rockets would be launched
in the coming months and that their dimensions would permit
them to carry the Iranian “Omid” (Hope)
satellite.
Pictures broadcast by Iranian media show that the launch vehicle was very similar to the well-known “Shehab-3B” missile. It was even launched from a truck-towed launcher, similar to those shown in past Shehab-3 launches. It was also clear from the rocket contrail that the missile was liquid-fuelled (like the various Shehab models). Shehab-3 is a single-stage missile with a maximum burn-time of about 115 seconds (consistent with what was published for the Kavoshgar-1). In all likelihood, the “second stage” to which spokesmen referred was therefore the unpowered nose-cone of the missile, which contains the instrumentation, and that is what reached the altitude of 200 km. in its ballistic trajectory. That altitude is typical of the Shehab-3, which with full warhead in operational flight over maximum range has reached similar and even greater altitudes. Nor was this launch Kavoshgar’s first. In February 2007, Iran spokesmen reported the launch of a similar sounding rocket to an altitude of 150 km.
The Space Research
Center
The Iranian Space Research Center was built in
an uninhabited desert area in Semnan Province, south-east of
Tehran. The Center has a remote satellite
command-and-control facility and a satellite launch pad.
Pictures of the site show a launch pad and a launch tower
(which was not used in the latest launch).
The
“Omid” Satellite
Little has been published about
the Omid satellite scheduled for launch this summer except
that it is a sounding rocket developed and built by Iranian
scientists and is intended to monitor natural disasters.
The satellite has been under development for a decade. It
will reportedly orbit at an altitude of 650 km. and will
pass over Iran some 5-6 times per day.
The Satellite
Program
Although Iran has for years declared its
aspirations in the realm of satellites, it still lags behind
many other states in the region. Its first satellite, the
“Sina-1,” was basically constructed by a Russian company
and launched by a Russian rocket in October 2005. That was
a research satellite weighing 170 kg., with no known
military-grade photographic capabilities. Another
satellite, which was supposed to be launched even before the
Sina-1, was the “Mesbah” research satellite but weighing
only 65 kg. It was built by an Italian company and,
according to Iranian spokesmen, it was supposed to be
launched by an Iranian rocket in 2003; it is still waiting
to be launched, probably by a Russian launcher as well. The
“Zohreh” communications satellite went through many
incarnations, even during the time of the Shah. The latest
version was supposed to be built by a Russian company and to
carry western European broadcasting equipment. This
project, too, appears to be suffering numerous delays. In
the past, Iranian spokesmen mentioned two other satellites.
One was a joint project with several other countries
(including Pakistan and China), named SMMS. In recent
years, there has been no information available about the
fate of the SMMS. The other was the “Safir”
(“Ambassador”) – a small satellite weighing 20 kg. It
is entirely possible that the Safir and Omid are one and the
same.
Launchers
Nothing is known about the
launch vehicle that will carry the Omid into space. About a
decade ago, there were reports about an Iranian-developed
satellite launcher named IRIS, which was based on the
Shehab-3 missile. A launcher based on Shehab technology
(single-stage, powered by fuel based on kerosene and red
fuming nitric acid) could carry into space a satellite
weighing no more than 20 kg. Anything heavier would have to
rely on something similar to that used experimentally by
North Korea a decade ago, i.e., a two- or three-stage rocket
whose first stage is still based on outdated technology.
Thus far, there is information about such a development or
any experiments by Iranian scientists to launch multi-stage
missiles of any sort. It is known that Iran has developed a
missile, similar in size to the Shehab, which uses solid
fuel. That technology would allow the Iranians to build
stronger launch vehicles, but here, too, there is no
information about experiments with this technology (apart
from reports of the Iranians
themselves).
Implications
All Iranians who have
spoken out since the inauguration of the new Space Center
have stressed, not the strategic significance of the
satellite project but rather its importance for national
honor, i.e., as proof of the Islamic Revolution’s
scientific accomplishments. Iran undoubtedly also aspires
to advanced satellite capability for communications,
scientific, economic and military reasons. To achieve that,
Iran is prepared to invest much in its missile and satellite
programs. However, at the present time, the projects still
appear to be little more than first steps that hold out
future hopes for national pride while lacking practical
application. The protracted delays both in indigenous
projects and in procurement from abroad (e.g., the Mesbah
and the Zohreh) reflect ongoing difficulties in managing and
advancing such complicated
undertakings.