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Vega VV04 IXV Liftoff
Enabling & Support

Vega

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ESA / Enabling & Support / Space Transportation / Launch vehicles

Vega is designed to cope with a wide range of missions and payload configurations in order to respond to different market opportunities.

Unlike most small launchers, Vega is able to place multiple payloads into orbit. In particular, it offers configurations able to handle payloads ranging from a single satellite up to one main satellite plus additional small satellites.

Payload masses range from 300 kg to 2500 kg, depending on the type and altitude of the orbit required by the customers. Vega is benchmarked to loft 1500 kg into a 700 km-altitude circular orbit at 90° inclination. It is the ideal launcher for most scientific and Earth observation missions.

Named after the second brightest star in the northern hemisphere, Vega makes access to space easier, quicker and cheaper. It operates from Europe’s Spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana.

Vega is a 3 m-diameter single-body vehicle, standing 30 m tall with a liftoff mass of 137 tonnes. It has three solid-propellant stages and a liquid-propellant upper module for attitude and orbit control, and satellite release.

Vega officially became an ESA programme in June 1998, when the Agency inherited the small-launcher programme of Italy’s ASI space agency.

Following Vega’s debut on 13 February 2012, ESA’s Verta (Vega Research and Technology Accompaniment) programme was set up with the main objective of providing a framework for the smooth transition of Vega from development to exploitation.

This included securing the initial exploitation of Vega by supporting the development of complementary technical advances and demonstrating a range of capabilities and flexibility over five more launches.

Vega moved to full commercial exploitation in December 2015.

At the same time, ESA refined and improved the launch system configuration and operations. This lowered costs mainly by speeding up the launch campaign.

The Vega launches in 2015 (IXV, Sentinel-2A and LISA Pathfinder) displayed the capacity of the system to reach three missions per year, providing confidence to customers and helping Arianespace to maintain its lead in this market segment.

ESA’s Launchers Exploitation Accompaniment Programme, or LEAP, will ensure that Vega remains operational and that further improvements will reduce launch service costs.

Vega evolution

Artist's view of Vega-C
Artist's view of Vega-C

At the ESA Ministerial meeting in December 2014, Member States agreed to begin developing the more powerful Vega C, now expected to debut in 2018, with the main objectives:

  • to strengthen Vega’s position in the market in the short to medium term;
  • to increase launch vehicle performance by at least 300 kg and increase the flexibility for multiple payloads missions;
  • to be able to introduce the Vega C configuration to the market from end-2018 at a cost no higher than today’s Vega, profiting from the shared development with Ariane 6 of the first-stage motor;
  • to reduce the dependency on non-European sources in launcher production at no extra cost;
  • to respond better to long-term institutional needs;
  • to help maintain European industrial engineering capabilities, particularly in propulsion, in parallel to the Vega and Vega C exploitation.

 

Additional improvements are being studied to enable Vega to carry micro- and nanosatellites in order to be cost-effective in this emerging market.

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