Military Wiki
Space Launch Complex 41
An aerial view of SLC-41. The Atlas V on the pad is the one used to launch New Horizons to Pluto.
Launch site Cape Canaveral Air Force Station
Location 28°35′00″N 80°34′59″W / 28.5833333°N 80.58306°W / 28.5833333; -80.58306Coordinates: 28°35′00″N 80°34′59″W / 28.5833333°N 80.58306°W / 28.5833333; -80.58306
Short name SLC-41
Operator United States Air Force
Total launches 61
Launch pad(s) 1
Min / max
orbital inclination
28° - 57°
Launch history
Status Active
First launch 21 December 1965
Titan IIIC / LES-3/4
Last launch 18 September 2013
Atlas V / AEHF-3
Associated
rockets
Titan IIIC
Titan IIIE
Titan IV
Atlas V (current)
Titan IVA Centaur with Mercury ELINT spy satellite

A Titan IV on LC-41 in 1996

Cape Canaveral Air Force Station Space Launch Complex 41 (SLC-41), previously Launch Complex 41 (LC-41), is an active launch site at the north end of Cape Canaveral, Florida at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.[1][2] The site is currently used by United Launch Alliance for Atlas V launches. Previously, it had been used by the Air Force, for Titan III and Titan IV launches.

Titan III[]

The Titan III launch facilities at CCAFS were built as part of an Integrate-Transfer-Launch approach intended to enable a rapid launch rate. Titan vehicles were assembled and integrated with their payloads off-pad and then transported by rail to one of the two pads. The Titan III facilities included both LC-40 and LC-41, assembly buildings including the Vertical Integration Building, and the first rail line at the Cape.[3] The facilities were completed in 1964 and the first launch from LC-41 was of a Titan IIIC, carrying four separate payloads, on December 21, 1965.

Titan IV[]

LC-41 was also the pad used for the maiden flight of the Titan IV. The last Titan launch was on April 9, 1999, when a Titan IVB launched the USA 142 early warning satellite. This launch resulted in a failure, after the IUS upper stage failed to separate, leaving the payload stranded in a useless GTO orbit.

Atlas V[]

After the last Titan launch the complex was renovated, and since 2002 LC-41 has been used by ULA for Atlas V launches. The maiden flight of Atlas V launched from LC-41 on August 21, 2002. The Atlas V booster lifted Hot Bird 6, a Eutelsat geostationary communications spacecraft built around a Spacebus 3000B3 bus. Atlas V rockets are assembled vertically on a mobile launch platform in the Vertical Integration Facility, located to the South of the pad. The platform is transported to the launch pad on rails, around a day before launch.

Payloads[]

In addition to satellites, Titan vehicles launched several probes from LC-41 in the 1970s, including the Helios probes to study the Sun, the Viking probes to Mars, and the Voyager planetary flyby and deep space probes. More recent probes have also been launched from LC-41 using the Atlas V: the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter in December 2004, the New Horizons spacecraft to Pluto in January 2006, Juno mission to Jupiter in August 2011,[4] and Mars Science Laboratory to Mars in November 2011.[5][6]

See also[]

References[]

External links[]