Joint Space Agency: Difference between revisions

Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 52: Line 52:
* {{flag|Belfras}}
* {{flag|Belfras}}
* {{flag|Cavarzere}}
* {{flag|Cavarzere}}
* {{flag|Enyama}}
* {{flag|Fakolana}}
* {{flag|Fakolana}}
* {{flag|Ghant}}
* {{flag|Ghant}}
Line 59: Line 58:
* {{flag|Lion's Rock}}
* {{flag|Lion's Rock}}
* {{flag|Lyncanestria}}
* {{flag|Lyncanestria}}
* {{flag|Ostrozava}}
* {{flag|Sante Reze}}
* {{flag|Sante Reze}}
* {{flag|Tarsas}}
* {{flag|Tarsas}}
Line 66: Line 66:
===Associate members===
===Associate members===
* {{flag|Belisarian Community}}
* {{flag|Belisarian Community}}
* {{flag|Enyama}}
* {{flag|Ostmark}}
* {{flag|Ostmark}}
* {{flag|Ottonia}}
* {{flag|Ottonia}}

Revision as of 21:04, 15 November 2019

Joint Space Agency
Joint Space Agency.png
Abbreviation
  • JSA
Formation30 May 1961; 62 years ago (1961-05-30)
Parent organisation

The Joint Space Agency is a multinational confederation of national space agencies and private corporations dedicated to the exploration of space. It was conceived in the 1960s as a means for countries to pool resources together to jointly develop a civilian aerospace program in a more cost-effective manner than purely national endeavours. It currently engages in both manned and unmanned scientific missions, as well as commercial satellite launches, with which the JSA is largely self-financing. Its main spaceports are the International Launch Centre located in Sante Reze, and the Pyrkagies Institute of Rocketry in southern Tarsas.

Current members

Membership in the JSA is split into two categories. Full members are states or entities which provide the balance of the JSA's funding, technology or personnel. Associate membership entails a lesser level of commitment and these members participate in the JSA in a more ad hoc or occasional basis. Only full members participate in executive decision-making for the Agency as a whole, although associate members which participate in specific missions may have significant influence in relation to those missions.

Full members

Associate members

Launch systems

The Athena V heavy-lift launch system

The Joint Space Agency currently operates three launch systems.

The Athena IV is a medium-lift launcher originally developed from an Arthuristan FOBS-capable ICBM design which, whilst derided as 'insane' as a weapons system and quickly cancelled whilst still in the design stage, proved to be an astute choice for repurposing as a launch vehicle. Capable of lifting 7,500kg of payload to the Low Earth Orbit ('LEO') and 4,500kg to the Geostationary orbit ('GEO'), it is cost-effective 'workhorse' vehicle, mostly used for commercial launches. The Athena V is a heavy lift vehicle capable of carrying 28,000kg of payload to the LEO and 15,000 to the GEO. It is also the means by which the JSA's crewed orbiter system is launched.

Recently, a third launch system, the Horus 9, has been added to the JSA's repertoire. It is optimised for the launch of light to medium payload utilising a reusable booster system, aimed at significantly reducing future launch costs for commercial undertakings.

Pegasus Crewed Orbiter System

The Pegasus COS

The Pegasus Crewed Orbiter System (PCOBS), introduced in 1985, is the main spacecraft employed by the JSA for manned missions to the Low Earth Orbit and beyond. It is a combination of three parts: the service module, the cockpit module and the habitation module. The are two variants of the service module: The standard LEO model an the lunar model, which is an enlarged and extended variation of the former packing additional batteries, fuel and fuel cells.

It is launched using the Athena V heavy lift system. Re-entry is accomplished using the cockpit module alone, which is equipped with an ablative heat shield, parachute and flotation aid for ocean surface recovery.

The habitation module may be modified with different docking ports for access to various national and international space station projects. A proposed third variant of the service module – the Extra-Lunar model, is undergoing development, which would allow the Pegasus to conduct manned missions to the near-earth asteroids and beyond.