Manufacturer | RKK Energia, JSC Krasnoyarsk Machine-Building Plant (since 1990)[1] |
---|---|
Country of origin | Russia |
Used on | Proton-M Angara A5 |
Associated stages | |
Family | Blok D |
Derived from | Blok DM-2 Blok DM-SL |
Comparable | Briz-M |
Launch history | |
Status | Active |
Total launches | 8 |
Successes (stage only) | 6 |
Failed | 2[note 1] |
Lower stage failed | 1[note 1] |
First flight | 5 December 2010 |
Last flight | 5 February 2023 |
Specifications | |
Powered by | RD-58MF |
Propellant | RP-1/LOX |
The Blok DM-03 (Russian: Блок ДМ-03 meaning Block DM-03), GRAU index 11S861-03, is a Russian upper stage used as an optional fourth stage on the Proton-M and Angara A5 heavy-lift rockets. Three have been launched, the first in December 2010;[2] the first two launches failed before fourth stage ignition, the first as a result of a problem with the Blok DM's fuel load.[3] Some versions are also known as Orion.[4]
Initial versions of the Blok DM-03 are powered by a single RD-58M engine, burning RG-1 and liquid oxygen. The last evolution is powered by the improved RD-58MF, a less powerful but more efficient evolution of the venerable engine. It can carry 25% more propellant than the Blok DM-2, which it replaced as a Proton upper stage for some government launches.[3] However most government launches and all commercial missions use the Briz-M instead. The payloads for the first two Blok DM-03 launches were groups of three Uragan-M satellites for the GLONASS programme, with further missions slated to carry three more Uragan-M satellites, and two Ekspress satellites on separate launches. The Blok DM can inject payloads into orbit more accurately than the Briz-M,[5] making it better suited for launching satellites such as the Uragan-M which lack apogee motors.
When production ended in 2012, five Blok DM-03 stages had been produced by RKK Energia, for use on Proton and potentially Zenit rockets.[3] A new version of the upper stage is expected to be introduced once the five launches are complete;[6] all five DM-03s have been slated for Proton launches between 2010 and 2015. During a November 2014 interview, Vladimir Kolmykov, the Deputy General Director of the Chemical Division of Krasnoyarsk Machine-Building Plant, stated that the production of Block-DM was suspended during that year, but work on the stage and development of the RD-58MF resumed during 2015.[7]
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