Jump to content

List of spacecraft with electric propulsion

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In chronological order, spacecraft are listed equipped with electric space propulsion. This includes both cruise engines and/or thrusters for attitude and orbit control. It is not specified whether the given engine is the sole means of propulsion or whether other types of engine are also used on a spacecraft. The list does not claim to be comprehensive.

Chronological overview

[edit]

Planned missions

[edit]
Planned missions
Spacecraft name Launch date Thruster type Model Propellant Spacecraft customer Thruster prime Comment
Starlink 1-1 to 1-60 2019 Hall effect thruster Krypton United States SpaceX United States SpaceX
Starlink 2-1 to 2-60 2019 Hall effect thruster Krypton United States SpaceX United States SpaceX
Starlink 3-1 to 3-60 2019 Hall effect thruster Krypton United States SpaceX United States SpaceX
APStar 6D 2019 Ion engine LIPS-300 Xenon China China LIP DFH-5 bus
GSAT-20 2024 Hall effect thruster Xenon India ISRO India ISRO
SES-17 2021 Hall effect thruster Xenon Luxembourg SES France Snecma (TBC) all-electric Spacebus Neo
Hotbird 13F 2021 Hall effect thruster PPS5000 (TBC) Xenon France Eutelsat France Snecma (TBC) all-electric bus Eurostar Neo
Hotbird 13G 2021 Hall effect thruster PPS5000 (TBC) Xenon France Eutelsat France Snecma (TBC) all-electric bus Eurostar Neo
ASTER 2021 Hall effect thruster PMHT Xenon Brazil AEB Brazil UnB MetNet bus
ETS-9 2021+ Hall effect thruster Xenon Japan JAXA Japan IHI Aerospace
Ionozond (Ionosfere 1 & 2) 2023+ Pulsed plasma thruster APPT-95 PTFE Russia Roskosmos Russia RIAME AOCS
NASA Gateway 2025 Hall effect thruster Xenon United States NASA United States L3-Aerojet Rocketdyne/Busek
AQUIS 2025 Vacuum Arc Jet Tungsten Germany Space Team Aachen Germany Space Team Aachen FEEP in development as upgrade
Soyuz-Sat-O ? Pulsed plasma thruster APPT-155 PTFE Russia
Belarus
Russia RIAME

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Present and Future of Space Electric Propulsion in Europe" (PDF). Retrieved 2019-10-09.
  2. ^ "paper From RNII to Keldysh Research Center on page 56 of the magazine Земля и Вселенная #5 2013" (PDF). Retrieved 2020-05-06.
  3. ^ "IAC Archive — IAC-07/C4/4/1". iafastro.directory. Retrieved 2019-07-23.
  4. ^ "Review of works on Electric propulsion at Keldysh Research Center" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 July 2019. Retrieved 23 July 2019.
  5. ^ "GSLV D3/GSAT-4 Brochure" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 December 2017. Retrieved 23 July 2019.
  6. ^ "ISRO to Test Electric Propulsion on Satellites". Archived from the original on December 2, 2015.
  7. ^ Murthy, P. V. N.; Raghavaiah, Vaddi; Sowjanya, P.; Renuka, R.; Kumar, Shiv S.; Hariharan, V. K.; Rao, M. Nageswara (Dec 2016). "Study on EMI/ESD effects of Electric Propulsion System on spacecraft systems and mitigation techniques". 2016 International Conference on ElectroMagnetic Interference & Compatibility (INCEMIC). IEEE. pp. 1–4. doi:10.1109/incemic.2016.7921463. ISBN 9781509058402. S2CID 44506648.
  8. ^ "Центр Келдыша разработал новый электроракетный двигатель". ТАСС. Retrieved 2019-07-23.
  9. ^ HUANG, WENSHENG (Dec 2017). "Electric rockets power bigger share".
  10. ^ "MediaRoom - News Releases/Statements". MediaRoom. Retrieved 2019-12-17.
  11. ^ "Kacific1 Milestones: Bus and Payload Integration Complete – Kacific". Retrieved 2019-12-17.