From 3fb427343aafa31881c21f811cdf59cec874d4f4 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: siimav Date: Sun, 7 Jul 2024 18:03:26 +0300 Subject: [PATCH] Define ground stations for all launch sites --- GameData/RealSolarSystem/LaunchSites.cfg | 77 ++++++++++++++++-------- 1 file changed, 53 insertions(+), 24 deletions(-) diff --git a/GameData/RealSolarSystem/LaunchSites.cfg b/GameData/RealSolarSystem/LaunchSites.cfg index 49b9c64c..1aa472de 100644 --- a/GameData/RealSolarSystem/LaunchSites.cfg +++ b/GameData/RealSolarSystem/LaunchSites.cfg @@ -26,6 +26,7 @@ name = au_woomera displayName = #RSS_Site_woomera_name//AU - Woomera description = #RSS_Site_woomera_desc//Launch Area 5 (LA5) is a still operational site at the RAAF Woomera Range Test Range which forms the primary operational capability of the Woomera Range Complex. Originally LA5 was a rocket launch site which supported a number of British experimental launches, including the United Kingdom's first, and as of 2015 only, satellite launch. It consisted of three separate launch pads, which supported 22 Black Knight sounding rocket launches, and four Black Arrow carrier rocket launches. Of the four Black Arrow launches, two were orbital launches, the first of which, on 2 September 1970, failed, and the second, on 28 October 1971, succeeded, placing the Prospero satellite into low Earth orbit. + groundStation = AU - Woomera PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -52,6 +53,7 @@ name = ca_churchill displayName = #RSS_Site_ca_churchill_name//CA - Churchill description = #RSS_Site_ca_churchill_desc + groundStation = CA - Churchill PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -78,6 +80,7 @@ name = cn_jiuquan displayName = #RSS_Site_jiuquan_name//CN - Jiuquan description = #RSS_Site_jiuquan_desc//Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center (酒泉衛星發射中心, JSLC) is a Chinese space vehicle launch facility (spaceport) located in the Gobi desert, about 1,600 km from Beijing. It is part of the Dongfeng Aerospace City (Base 10). Although the facility is geographically located within Ejin Banner of Inner Mongolia's Alxa League, it is named after the nearest city, Jiuquan in Gansu Province. + groundStation = CN - Jiuquan PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -104,6 +107,7 @@ name = cn_taiyuan displayName = #RSS_Site_taiyuan_name//CN - Taiyuan description = #RSS_Site_taiyuan_desc//The Taiyuan Satellite Launch Center (太原衛星發射中心, TSLC) also known as Base 25 (Chinese: 二十五基地), is a People's Republic of China space and defence launch facility (spaceport). It is situated in Kelan County, Xinzhou, Shanxi Province and is the second of three launch sites having been founded in March 1966 and coming into full operation in 1968. Taiyuan sits at an altitude of 1500 meters and its dry weather makes it an ideal launch site. Confusingly, U.S. intelligence designates TSLC the 'Wuzhai Missile and Space Test Centre", despite the fact that the town of Wuzhai is located a considerable distance from the Taiyuan space launch facility. The site is primarily used to launch meteorological satellites, earth resource satellites and scientific satellites on Long March launch vehicles into sun-synchronous orbits. TSLC is also a major launch site for ICBMs and overland Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missile (SLBM) tests. The site has a sophisticated Technical Center and Mission Command and Control Center. It is served by two feeder railways that connect with the Ningwu-Kelan Railway. + groundStation = CN - Taiyuan PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -130,6 +134,7 @@ name = cn_wenchang displayName = #RSS_Site_wenchang_name//CN - Wenchang description = #RSS_Site_wenchang_desc//Wenchang Satellite Launch Center (文昌衛星發射中心, WSLC), located in Wenchang, Hainan, China, is a former sub-orbital test center. It is China's fourth and southernmost space vehicle launch facility (spaceport). It has been specially selected for its low latitude, which is only 19 degrees north of the equator, which will allow for a substantial increase in payload, necessary for the future manned program, space station and deep space exploration program. + groundStation = CN - Wenchang PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -156,6 +161,7 @@ name = cn_xichang displayName = #RSS_Site_xichang_name//CN - Xichang description = #RSS_Site_xichang_desc//The Xichang Satellite Launch Center (西昌衛星發射中心, XSLC), also known as the Xichang Space Center, is a People's Republic of China space vehicle launch facility (spaceport) approximately 64 kilometres (40 miles) northwest of Xichang, Liangshan Yi Autonomous Prefecture in Sichuan. The facility became operational in 1984 and is primarily used to launch powerful thrust rockets and geostationary communications and weather satellites. It is notable as the site of Sino-European space cooperation, with the launch of the first of two Double Star scientific satellites in December 2003. Chinese officials have indicated interest in conducting additional international satellite launches from XSLC. + groundStation = CN - Xichang PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -182,6 +188,7 @@ name = dz_hammaguir displayName = #RSS_Site_hammaguir_name//DZ - Hammaguir description = #RSS_Site_hammaguir_desc//Between 1947 and 1967 there was a rocket launch site near Hammaguir, used by France for launching sounding rockets and the satellite carrier "Diamant" between 1965 and 1967. The first French satellite Astérix was launched from there in 1965. + groundStation = DZ - Hammaguir PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -208,6 +215,7 @@ name = fr_kourou displayName = #RSS_Site_kourou_name//FR - Kourou description = #RSS_Site_kourou_desc//The Guiana Space Centre or, more commonly, Centre spatial guyanais (CSG) is a French and European spaceport near Kourou in French Guiana. Operational since 1968. The European Space Agency (ESA), the French space agency CNES (National Centre for Space Studies), and the commercial Arianespace company conduct launches from Kourou. This is the spaceport used by the ESA to send supplies to the International Space Station using the Automated Transfer Vehicle. The location was selected in 1964 to become the spaceport of France. In 1975, France offered to share Kourou with ESA. Commercial launches are bought also by non-European companies. ESA pays two thirds of the spaceport's annual budget and has also financed the upgrades made during the development of the Ariane launchers. + groundStation = FR - Kourou PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -234,6 +242,7 @@ name = il_palmachim displayName = #RSS_Site_palmachim_name//IL - Palmachim description = #RSS_Site_palmachim_desc//The Palmachim Air Force Base (Hebrew: בָּסִיס חֵיל-הַאֲוִויר פַּלְמַחִים‎) is an Israeli military facility and spaceport located near the cities of Rishon LeZion and Yavne on the Mediterranean Sea. It is named after nearby Kibbutz Palmachim on the Mediterranean shore. The base is home to several IAF helicopter and UAV squadrons, and serves as a rocket launch site for the Arrow missile. Palmachim is also used to launch the Shavit space launch vehicle into retrograde orbit by launching over the Mediterranean, acting as Israel's primary spaceport. The launchpad is situated at 31°53'04″N 34°40'49″E This ensures that rocket debris falls into water, and that the rocket does not fire over regional neighboring countries near Israel that could use the technology. Palmachim is also used to test ballistic missiles, such as the Jericho. + groundStation = IL - Palmachim PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -260,6 +269,7 @@ name = in_satish_dhawan displayName = #RSS_Site_satish_dhawan_name//IN - Satish Dhawan description = #RSS_Site_satish_dhawan_desc//Satish Dhawan Space Centre or Sriharikota Range (SHAR) is a rocket launch center operated by Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO). It is located in Sriharikota in Andhra Pradesh. Sriharikota Launching Range was renamed in 2002 after ISRO's former chairman Satish Dhawan. The SHAR facility now consists of two launch pads, with the second built in 2005. The second launch pad was used for launches beginning in 2005 and is a universal launch pad, accommodating all of the launch vehicles used by ISRO. The two launch pads will allow multiple launches in a single year, which was not possible earlier. SHAR will be the main base for the Indian human spaceflight program. A new third launchpad will be built specifically to meet the target of launching a manned space mission by 2017. + groundStation = IN - Satish Dhawan PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -286,6 +296,7 @@ name = ir_semnan displayName = #RSS_Site_semnan_name//IR - Semnan description = #RSS_Site_semnan_desc//On occasion of the inaugural launch of Iran's first Safir-class sub-orbital rocket called Kavoshgar-1 (Explorer-1), Iran unveiled on February 4, 2008, her first Satellite Launch Center 35.234°N 53.921°E in Semnan. The facility includes an underground command and control center, a tracking station and a launchpad among other structures. + groundStation = IR - Semnan PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -312,6 +323,7 @@ name = jp_tanegashima displayName = #RSS_Site_tanegashima_name//JP - Tanegashima description = #RSS_Site_tanegashima_desc//The Tanegashima Space Center (種子島宇宙センター, Tanegashima Uchū Sentā) (TNSC) is a Japanese space development facility. It is located on Tanegashima, an island located 115 km south of Kyushu. It was established in 1969 when the National Space Development Agency of Japan (NASDA) was formed, and is now run by JAXA. The activities that take place at TNSC include assembly, testing, launching and tracking of satellites, as well as rocket engine firing tests. It is Japan's largest space development center. + groundStation = JP - Tanegashima PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -338,6 +350,7 @@ name = jp_uchinoura displayName = #RSS_Site_uchinoura_name//JP - Uchinoura description = #RSS_Site_uchinoura_desc//The Uchinoura Space Center (内之浦宇宙空間観測所, Uchinoura Uchu Kukan Kansokusho) is a space launch facility close to the Japanese town of Kimotsuki, in Kagoshima Prefecture. Before the establishment of the JAXA space agency in 2003, it was simply called the Kagoshima Space Center (鹿児島宇宙空間観測所). All Japan's scientific satellites were launched from Uchinoura prior to the M-V launch vehicles being decommissioned in 2006. It continues to be used for suborbital launches, and has also been used for the Epsilon orbital launch vehicle. Additionally, the center has antennas for communication with interplanetary space probes. + groundStation = JP - Uchinoura PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -364,6 +377,7 @@ name = kp_sohae displayName = #RSS_Site_sohae_name//KP - Sohae description = #RSS_Site_sohae_desc//Sohae Satellite Launching Station (서해위성발사장, 西海衛星發射場, Sohae Wisŏng Palsajang) is a rocket launching site in Cholsan County, North Pyongan Province, North Korea. + groundStation = KP - Sohae PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -390,6 +404,7 @@ name = kr_naro displayName = #RSS_Site_naro_name//KR - Naro description = #RSS_Site_naro_desc//Naro Space Center (나로우주센터, 羅老宇宙센터, Naro Uju Senteo) is a South Korean spaceport in South Jeolla's Goheung County, operated by the state-run Korea Aerospace Research Institute. + groundStation = KR - Naro PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -416,6 +431,7 @@ name = kz_baikonur displayName = #RSS_Site_baikonur_name//KZ - Baikonur description = #RSS_Site_baikonur_desc//Baikonur Cosmodrome (Космодром «Байконур») is the world's first and largest operational space launch facility. It is located in the desert steppe of Kazakhstan, about 200 kilometres (124 mi) east of the Aral Sea, north of the Syr Darya river, near Tyuratam railway station, at 90 meters above sea level. It is leased by the Kazakh government to Russia (until 2050) and is managed jointly by the Russian Federal Space Agency and the Russian Aerospace Defence Forces. The shape of the area leased is an ellipse, measuring 90 kilometres (56 mi) east-west by 85 kilometres (53 mi) north-south, with the cosmodrome at the centre. It was originally built by the Soviet Union in the late 1950s as the base of operations for its space program. Under the current Russian space program, Baikonur remains a busy spaceport, with numerous commercial, military and scientific missions being launched annually. All manned Russian spaceflights are launched from Baikonur. + groundStation = KZ - Baikonur PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -442,6 +458,7 @@ name = mh_omelek displayName = #RSS_Site_omelek_name//MH - Omelek description = #RSS_Site_omelek_desc//Omelek has long been used by the United States for small research rocket launches due to its relative isolation in the South Pacific. The last U.S. government rocket launch occurred in 1996. After 2000, the island's equatorial proximity and nearby radar tracking infrastructure attracted SpaceX, an orbital launch provider, which updated facilities on the island and established it as their primary launch location by 2006. SpaceX began launching Falcon 1 rockets from Omelek in 2006. Omelek was planned to host launches for the upgraded Falcon 1e rocket, but as of 2012, SpaceX stopped development on the Falcon 1e launches while it focused on its large Falcon 9 launch manifest. SpaceX had tentatively planned to upgrade the launch site for use by the Falcon 9 launch vehicle. As of December 2010, the SpaceX launch manifest listed Omelek (Kwajalein) as a potential site for several Falcon 9 launches, the first in 2012, and the Falcon 9 Overview document offered Kwajalein as a launch option. + groundStation = MH - Omelek PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -464,36 +481,38 @@ } } Site - { - name = nz_mahia - displayName = #RSS_Site_mahia_name//NZ - Mahia - description = #RSS_Site_mahia_desc - PQSCity - { - KEYname = KSC + { + name = nz_mahia + displayName = #RSS_Site_mahia_name//NZ - Mahia + description = #RSS_Site_mahia_desc + groundStation = NZ - Mahia + PQSCity + { + KEYname = KSC changeGrassColor = true - latitude = -39.26044 - longitude = 177.86431 - repositionRadiusOffset = 139.3 - repositionToSphereSurface = false - lodvisibleRangeMult = 6 - reorientFinalAngle = -267.86431 - } - PQSMod_MapDecalTangent - { - radius = 20000 - heightMapDeformity = 80 - absoluteOffset = 89.3 - absolute = true - latitude = -39.26044 - longitude = 177.86431 - } - } + latitude = -39.26044 + longitude = 177.86431 + repositionRadiusOffset = 139.3 + repositionToSphereSurface = false + lodvisibleRangeMult = 6 + reorientFinalAngle = -267.86431 + } + PQSMod_MapDecalTangent + { + radius = 20000 + heightMapDeformity = 80 + absoluteOffset = 89.3 + absolute = true + latitude = -39.26044 + longitude = 177.86431 + } + } Site { name = ru_kasputin_yar displayName = #RSS_Site_kasputin_yar_name//RU - Kapustin Yar description = #RSS_Site_kasputin_yar_desc//Kapustin Yar (Russian: Капустин Яр) is a Russian rocket launch and development site in Astrakhan Oblast, between Volgograd and Astrakhan. Known today as Znamensk (Russian: Знаменск), it was established in Soviet Union era on 13 May 1946 and in the beginning used technology, material and scientific support from defeated Germany. Numerous launches of test rockets for the Russian military were carried out at the site, as well as satellite and sounding rocket launches. + groundStation = RU - Kapustin Yar PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -520,6 +539,7 @@ name = ru_plesetsk displayName = #RSS_Site_plesetsk_name//RU - Plesetsk description = #RSS_Site_plesetsk_desc//Plesetsk Cosmodrome (Russian: Космодром «Плесецк»), a Russian spaceport located in Mirny, Arkhangelsk Oblast, about 800 km north of Moscow and approximately 200 km south of Arkhangelsk, dates from 1957. Originally developed as an ICBM site for the R-7 missile, it also served for numerous satellite launches using the R-7 and other rockets. Its high latitude makes it useful only for certain types of launches, especially the Molniya orbits, so for much of the site's history it functioned as a secondary location, with most orbital launches taking place from Baikonur, in the Kazakh SSR. With the end of the Soviet Union, for Russia Baikonur became foreign territory which charged usage fees, so Plesetsk has seen considerably more activity since the 2000s. + groundStation = RU - Plesetsk PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -546,6 +566,7 @@ name = ru_svobodny displayName = #RSS_Site_svobodny_name//RU - Svobodny/Vostochny description = #RSS_Site_svobodny_desc//Svobodny (Свободный)/Vostochny (Восточный) Cosmodrome (These are combined as they are at virtually the same location and KSCSwitcher can't distinguish between them). Vostochny is a Russian spaceport on the 51st parallel north in the Amur Oblast. Svobodny was a Russian rocket launch site located at 51 degrees north in the Amur Oblast. The cosmodrome was originally constructed as a launch site for intercontinental ballistic missiles called Svobodny-18. It was initially selected as a replacement for Baikonur Cosmodrome in the Kazakh Soviet Socialist Republic, which became independent as Kazakhstan after the dissolution of the Soviet Union. However the development of Svobodny was subsequently ended in 2007 in favour of a totally new space port, the Vostochny Cosmodrome. The breakup of the Soviet Union left their primary cosmodrome at Baikonur in a foreign country, Kazakhistan. Studies for a far-east location closer to the latitude of Baikonur started, and initially settled on the existing missile base at Svobodny. This was located near the railway station of Ledyanaya, and had been used for several decades by the 27th rocket division of Strategic Rocket Forces. On March 1, 1996 President Yeltsin issued a decree formally declaring the site as a cosmodrome. + groundStation = RU - Svobodny PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -572,6 +593,7 @@ name = ru_yasny displayName = #RSS_Site_yasny_name//RU - Yasny description = #RSS_Site_yasny_desc//Dombarovsky (also given as Dombarovskiy and Tagilom) is a military airbase 6 kilometres (3.7 mi) northwest of the village of Dombarovsky, near Yasny in Russia's Orenburg Oblast. Operated by the Soviet Air Forces and later by the Russian Air Force, it hosts fighter interceptor squadrons and an ICBM base (which has been adapted for commercial satellite launches). + groundStation = RU - Yasny PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -598,6 +620,7 @@ name = se_esrange displayName = #RSS_Site_esrange_name//SE - Esrange description = #RSS_Site_esrange_desc//Esrange Space Center is a rocket range and research centre located about 40 kilometers east of the town of Kiruna in northern Sweden. It is a base for scientific research with high-altitude balloons, investigation of the aurora borealis, sounding rocket launches, and satellite tracking, among other things. Located 200 km north of the Arctic Circle and surrounded by a vast wilderness, its geographic location is ideal for many of these purposes. + groundStation = SE - Esrange PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -624,6 +647,7 @@ name = us_brownsville displayName = #RSS_Site_brownsville_name//US - Brownsville description = #RSS_Site_brownsville_desc//The SpaceX private launch site is a space launch facility being built at Boca Chica Village near Brownsville, Texas for the private use of Space Exploration Technologies Corporation (SpaceX). Its purpose is "to provide SpaceX an exclusive launch site that would allow the company to accommodate its launch manifest and meet tight launch windows." The launch site will be the first commercial orbital launch facility and is intended to support launches of the SpaceX Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy launch vehicles as well as "a variety of reusable suborbital launch vehicles." SpaceX CEO Elon Musk has also indicated that he expects "commercial astronauts, private astronauts, to be departing from South Texas," and foresees launching spacecraft to Mars in the future. + groundStation = US - Brownsville PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -650,6 +674,7 @@ name = us_cape_canaveral displayName = #RSS_Site_cape_canaveral_name//US - Cape Canaveral description = #RSS_Site_cape_canaveral_desc//The John F. Kennedy Space Center (KSC) is the NASA facility supporting Launch Complex 39 (LC-39), originally built for the Saturn V, the largest and most powerful operational launch vehicle in history, for the Apollo manned Moon landing program proposed by President John F. Kennedy. It was named in honor of Kennedy by his successor, President Lyndon B. Johnson, shortly after Kennedy's death in 1963. Since the end of the Apollo program in 1972, LC-39 has been used to launch every NASA human space flight, including Skylab (1973), the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project (1974), and the Space Shuttle program (1981-2011). KSC also has a facility which was used for landing the reusable Space Shuttle orbiters when weather permitted. KSC continues to manage and operate unmanned rocket launch facilities for the U.S. government's civilian space program from three pads at the adjoining Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. Its Vehicle Assembly Building (VAB) is the fourth-largest structure in the world by volume, and was the largest when completed in 1965. + groundStation = US - Cape Canaveral PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -676,6 +701,7 @@ name = us_kodiak displayName = #RSS_Site_kodiak_name//US - Kodiak description = #RSS_Site_kodiak_desc//The Kodiak Launch Complex (KLC) is a commercial rocket launch facility for sub-orbital and orbital space launch vehicles owned and operated by the Alaska Aerospace Corporation, a public corporation of the State of Alaska. The facility is located on Kodiak Island, Alaska. The launch facility has handled 16 launches since it opened in 1998, most of those for the U.S. government. + groundStation = US - Kodiak PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -702,6 +728,7 @@ name = us_vandenburg displayName = #RSS_Site_vandenburg_name//US - Vandenberg description = #RSS_Site_vandenburg_desc//Vandenberg Air Force Base is a United States Air Force Base located 9.2 miles (14.8 km) northwest of Lompoc, California. It is under the jurisdiction of the 30th Space Wing, Air Force Space Command (AFSPC). Vandenberg AFB is a Department of Defense space and missile testing base, with a mission of placing satellites into polar orbit from the West Coast using expendable boosters (Pegasus, Taurus, Minotaur, Atlas V, Delta IV and now SpaceX's Falcon). Wing personnel also support the Service's LGM-30G Minuteman III Intercontinental Ballistic Missile Force Development Evaluation program. In addition to its military mission, the base also leases launch pad facilities to SpaceX (SLC-4E), as well as 100 acres (40 ha) leased to the California Spaceport in 1995. The base is named in honor of former Air Force Chief of Staff General Hoyt S. Vandenberg. + groundStation = US - Vandenberg PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -728,6 +755,7 @@ name = us_wallops displayName = #RSS_Site_wallops_name//US - Wallops description = #RSS_Site_wallops_desc//Wallops Flight Facility, located on the Eastern Shore of Virginia approximately 100 miles north-northeast of Norfolk, is operated by the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, primarily as a rocket launch site to support science and exploration missions for NASA and other Federal agencies. WFF includes an extensively instrumented range to support launches of more than a dozen types of sounding rockets, small expendable suborbital and orbital rockets, high altitude balloon flights carrying scientific instruments for atmospheric and astronomical research and—using its Research Airport—flight tests of aeronautical research aircraft including unmanned aerial vehicles. There have been over 16,000 launches from the rocket testing range at Wallops since its founding in 1945 in the quest for information on the flight characteristics of airplanes, launch vehicles, and spacecraft, and to increase the knowledge of the Earth's upper atmosphere and the environment of outer space. + groundStation = US - Wallops PQSCity { KEYname = KSC @@ -760,6 +788,7 @@ { %displayName = #RSS_Site_whitesands_name//US - White Sands %description = #RSS_Site_whitesands_desc//White Sands Space Harbor (WSSH) was a Space Shuttle runway, a test site for rocket research, and the primary training area used by NASA for Space Shuttle pilots practicing approaches and landings in the Shuttle Training Aircraft and T-38 Talon aircraft. With its runways, navigational aids, runway lighting, and control facilities, it also served as a backup Shuttle landing site. WSSH is a part of the White Sands Test Facility, and is located approximately 30 miles (50 kilometers) west of Alamogordo, New Mexico, within the boundaries of the White Sands Missile Range. + %groundStation = US - White Sands %PQSCity { %KEYname = KSC