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Inertial Upper Stage (IUS) in Orbit
Inertial Upper Stage (IUS) in Orbit
Ulysses Probe in Orbit with Inertial Upper Stage (IUS)
Inertial Upper Stage (IUS) in Laboratory
Unique Inertial Upper Stage (IUS) Configuration for Ulysses
Inertial Upper Stage (IUS) Launched from Space Shuttle Cargo Bay
Inertial Upper Stage (IUS) Launched from Space Shuttle Cargo Bay
First Titan IV Launch with Boeing Inertial Upper Stage (IUS-8)
Galileo in Orbit
Skylab Space Station in Orbit
Saturn V Orbital Workshop Rendering
Ares I Crew Launch Vehicle Upper Stage
Ares I Crew Launch Vehicle Upper Stage Separation
Ares I Crew Launch Vehicle Upper Stage
Saturn S-IVB Stage and Facility at Night DSV 4B
Boeing 702SP in Orbit
X-40A Space Maneuver Vehicle (SMV) in Flight Atop 747
Delta Rocket Third Stage
Titan III & Dyna-Soar in Ascent
Transporting Saturn S-IVB Third Stage Via Barge
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Inertial Upper Stage (IUS) in Orbit
The Boeing-developed Inertial Upper Stage (IUS), an unpiloted, upper-stage booster rocket, could be launched from the Titan 34D or Titan IV expendable launch vehicles or from the Space Shuttle. In 1989, the IUS sent the Magellan and Galileo spacecraft to Venus and Jupiter, respectively. In 1990 it sent the Ulysses spacecraft to the sun. A typical Boeing IUS mission launched from a Titan IVB involves IUS separation from the rocket's second-stage booster approximately nine minutes into flight. The IUS takes over responsibility for the remainder of the powered portion of the flight. For the next six hours and 54 minutes, the IUS autonomously performs all functions to place the spacecraft into its proper orbit, some 22,000 miles above the Earth. The first IUS rocket burn occurs a little over one hour into the IUS booster flight. The IUS second solid rocket motor ignites about six-and-a-half hours into the flight, followed by a coast phase, and then, separation of the spacecraft. Between 1983 and 2001, the Boeing Inertial Upper Stage successfully deployed more than 20 critical U.S. defense and interplanetary satellite missions into high Earth orbits.
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Unique identifier
BI25942
Boeing ID
r2529
Type
Image
Size
4300px × 5100px 62MB
License type
RM
Keywords
1980s
air to air
black
blue
clouds
contrast
copy space
dark
exteriors
flying
full body views
high-tech / advanced
historic production status
large
launch vehicles
nobody
orbiting
other livery
outer space
photos
remote
rockets
scanned from film negative
small
space
spacecraft
white
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