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Launch vehicle

Space Shuttle

The first reusable orbital spacecraft: a winged orbiter riding an external hydrogen tank, flanked by twin solid boosters. One hundred thirty-five flights built the ISS, launched and repaired Hubble, and taught the industry what reusability really costs — and what it's worth.

Height
56 m / 184 ft
Diameter
8.4 m / 27.6 ft
Liftoff mass
1,938 t
Liftoff thrust
30,250 kN
Stages
2
Payload to LEO · rated
28 t
Operator
NASA · Rockwell / Thiokol / Martin Marietta
First flight
1981
Status
retired

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Performance

Payload capacity, solved by the engine

Ideal staged-Δv model (rocket equation, Rust) against standard surface-to-destination budgets that include typical gravity/drag/steering losses. First-order — not a flight manifest.

LEO

Low Earth orbit (~9.4 km/s incl. losses)

GTO

Geostationary transfer (LEO + 2.44)

GEO

Direct to geostationary (LEO + 3.9)

Moon

Trans-lunar injection (LEO + 3.12)

Mars

Trans-Mars injection (LEO + 3.6)

Stage 1 · ×2 parallel

Solid boosters ×2

Length
45.5 m
Diameter
3.7 m
Dry mass
174 t
Propellant
1,002 t
Engines
2× 4-segment SRB
Thrust
25,000 kN
Isp (vacuum)
268 s

Stage 2

ET + 3× SSME

Length
46.9 m
Diameter
8.4 m
Dry mass
26.5 t
Propellant
735 t
Engines
3× RS-25 (SSME)
Thrust
5,250 kN
Isp (vacuum)
452 s

Now put it on a trajectory

Every number on this page came out of the same Rust engine that propagates your orbits. Load this vehicle on the Flight Deck, plan a transfer, and see if your mission closes.