NEXT SPACEFLIGHT

Status

Success

ATV-4

Launch Time
Wed Jun 05, 2013 21:52 UTC

Flight VA213.

Rocket

Ariane 5 ES
Image Credit: Arianespace
Arianespace
Status: Retired
Liftoff Thrust: 15,120 kN
Payload to LEO: 21,000 kg
Stages: 2
Strap-ons: 2
Rocket Height: 50.5 m
Fairing Diameter: 5.4 m
Fairing Height: 17.0 m

Mission Details

ATV-4 Albert Einstein

The Automated Transfer Vehicle, originally Ariane Transfer Vehicle or ATV, was an expendable cargo spacecraft developed by the European Space Agency (ESA) and used for space cargo transport from 2008–2014. The ATV design was launched to orbit five times, exclusively by the Ariane 5 heavy-lift launch vehicle. It effectively was a larger European counterpart to the Russian Progress cargo spacecraft for carrying upmass to a single destination—the International Space Station (ISS)—but with three times the capacity.

The five ATVs were named after important European figures in science and engineering: Jules Verne, Johannes Kepler, Edoardo Amaldi, Albert Einstein, and Georges Lemaître. Following several delays to the program, the first of these was launched in March 2008. These ATVs performed supply missions to the ISS, transporting various payloads such as propellant, water, air, food, and scientific research equipment; ATVs also reboosted the station into a higher orbit while docked. The ATV was an uncrewed platform that operated with a high level of automation, such as its docking sequence; at no point was it used for transporting passengers.

Further use of the ATV was proposed in 2008. Various further developments, including crewed versions of the ATV as well as opportunities to reuse sections or elements of its technology, were studied by both the ESA and Airbus Defence and Space, the principal manufacturer of the vehicle. However, on 2 April 2012, the ESA announced that the ATV program would be terminated following the launch of the fifth ATV in 2014.

In 2012, ESA member states decided that the ATV design might be adapted to serve as the service module of the NASA Orion spacecraft. In January 2013, the ESA and NASA announced that they would proceed with a combined Orion and ATV-derived service module, which would serve as a major component for the in-development Orion crewed spacecraft.

Payloads: 1
Total Mass: 19,842.0 kg
Low Earth Orbit

Location

ELA-3, Guiana Space Centre, French Guiana, France

Stats

2013

28th orbital launch attempt

Arianespace

206th mission
3rd mission of 2013
199th successful mission
62nd consecutive successful mission

Ariane 5

69th mission
2nd mission of 2013
65th successful mission
55th consecutive successful mission