The European Space Agency ESA has tested the IXV (Intermediate Experimental Vehicle) atmospheric re-entry demonstrator, which, after a 101-minute suborbital parabola, successfully ditched in the Pacific Ocean.
The mission began at 14.40 Italian time with take-off, on board a Vega launcher, from the Kourou spaceport in French Guiana. Reaching an altitude of 340 km, the IXV separated from the last stage of the launcher, continuing in free flight up to an altitude of 412 km, after which it began the re-entry phase into the atmosphere. The spaceplane controlled its attitude thanks to two special rear ailerons, gliding and slowing down as it passed through the increasingly dense layers of the atmosphere. At an altitude of 26 km, the parachute braking sequence began until the ditching in the ocean, where the IXV was recovered by the deep-sea tug Nos Aries of the Livorno-based Neri Group. The re-entry phase was the main focus of this test, as more than 300 sensors recorded a large amount of data that were analysed immediately afterwards.
The data obtained are indispensable for the realisation of the PRIDE programme (Programme for Reusable In-orbit Demonstrator for Europe), which will see the development of a mini-shuttle (similar to the USAF’s X-37/B) with the capability of carrying out orbital missions and glide landing.