https://sputnikglobe.com/20181112/russia-vostochny-space-port-angara-launch-1069720803.html
First Angara A5V Heavy-Class Rocket Launch to Take Place in 2026 – Roscosmos
First Angara A5V Heavy-Class Rocket Launch to Take Place in 2026 – Roscosmos
Sputnik International
MOSCOW (Sputnik) - The first heavy-lift Angara A5V carrier rocket equipped with a hydrogen space tug will be launched from the Vostochny space center in... 12.11.2018, Sputnik International
2018-11-12T01:58+0000
2018-11-12T01:58+0000
2018-11-12T01:03+0000
https://cdn1.img.sputnikglobe.com/img/104597/48/1045974880_0:116:2200:1354_1920x0_80_0_0_1c35a8cbc753f46391d41ee83dd4fcad.jpg
russia
Sputnik International
feedback@sputniknews.com
+74956456601
MIA „Rosiya Segodnya“
2018
Sputnik International
feedback@sputniknews.com
+74956456601
MIA „Rosiya Segodnya“
News
en_EN
Sputnik International
feedback@sputniknews.com
+74956456601
MIA „Rosiya Segodnya“
https://cdn1.img.sputnikglobe.com/img/104597/48/1045974880_122:0:2079:1468_1920x0_80_0_0_e1026949ec1a00af53f2fe3588049700.jpgSputnik International
feedback@sputniknews.com
+74956456601
MIA „Rosiya Segodnya“
newsfeed, society, russia, khrunichev state research and production space center, roscosmos, angara a5v carrier rocket, vostochny cosmodrome
newsfeed, society, russia, khrunichev state research and production space center, roscosmos, angara a5v carrier rocket, vostochny cosmodrome
First Angara A5V Heavy-Class Rocket Launch to Take Place in 2026 – Roscosmos
MOSCOW (Sputnik) - The first heavy-lift Angara A5V carrier rocket equipped with a hydrogen space tug will be launched from the Vostochny space center in Russia's Far East in 2026, Roscosmos chief Dmitry Rogozin said on Sunday.
The rocket’s launch was initially set to take place in 2027, according to the Khrunichev State Research and Production Space Center.
16 August 2017, 06:02 GMT
"On Vostochny [space center]… 2026 — the beginning of flight tests of Angara 5V with a hydrogen stage," Rogozin wrote on Twitter.
The Angara family of space launch vehicles is designed to provide lifting capabilities of between 2 and 40.5 metric tonnes into low Earth orbit.
It has been in development since 1995 and was the first orbit-capable rocket developed by Russia since the fall of the Soviet Union to replace the older Proton-M rockets.
READ MORE: Russia to Build New Launch Pad for Angara Rockets by 2019