Ariane 1 was a three-stage launcher, derived from
missile technology. The first two stages used
hypergolic propellants and the third stage used
cryogenic liquid hydrogen and
liquid oxygen (LH2/LOX). Ariane 2–4 were enhancements of the basic vehicle. The major differences are improved versions of the
engines, allowing stretched first- and third-stage tanks and greater payloads. The largest versions can launch two
satellites, mounted in the
SPELDA (Structure Porteuse Externe pour Lancements Doubles Ariane) adapter. Such later versions are often seen with strap-on
boosters. These layouts are designated by suffixes after the generation number. First is the total number of boosters, then letters designating
liquid- or
solid-fuelled stages. For example, an Ariane 42P is an Ariane 4 with two solid-fuel boosters. An Ariane 44LP has two solid, two liquid boosters, and a 44L has four liquid-fuel boosters. rocket at
Le Bourget Air and Space Museum, Paris Ariane 5 is a nearly complete redesign. The two hypergolic lower stages are replaced with a single LH2/LOX core stage. This simplifies the stack, along with the use of a single core engine (
Vulcain). Because the core cannot lift its own weight, two solid-fuel boosters are strapped to the sides. The boosters can be recovered for examination, but are not reused. There are two versions of the upper stage, one hypergolic and restartable with a single
Aestus engine and the other with a
HM7B cryogenic engine burning LH2/LOX. On 4 May 2007, an Ariane 5-ECA rocket set a new commercial payload record, lifting two satellites with a combined mass of 9.4 tonnes. By January 2006, 169 Ariane flights had boosted 290 satellites, successfully placing 271 of them on orbit (223 main passengers and 48 auxiliary passengers) for a total mass of 575,000 kg successfully delivered on orbit. Attesting to the ubiquity of Ariane launch vehicles, France's
Cerise satellite, which was orbited by an Ariane 4 in 1995, struck a discarded Ariane rocket stage in 1996. The incident marked the first verified case of a collision with a piece of catalogued
space debris. On February 16, 2011, the 200th Ariane rocket was launched, successfully carrying the
Johannes Kepler ATV into
low Earth orbit and providing
International Space Station with supplies. On November 26, 2019, flight number 250 was performed, lifting two
communications satellites:
TIBA-1 and
Inmarsat-5 F5 (GX5). On December 25, 2021,
Ariane flight VA256 lifted NASA's
James Webb Space Telescope towards Earth/Sun
Lagrange point L2. Ariane 5 flew its final mission on 5 July 2023.
Ariane Next is in early development, due for launch from the 2030s. ==See also==