Article 6GWJV What happens in Vega didn’t stay in Vega, as key rocket parts went missing

What happens in Vega didn’t stay in Vega, as key rocket parts went missing

by
Eric Berger
from Ars Technica - All content on (#6GWJV)
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Enlarge / A Vega rocket rides a column of exhaust from its solid-fueled first stage, kicking off a mission to deliver 12 small satellites into orbit. (credit: ESA/CNES/Arianespace)

The Italy-based aerospace company Avio has not had the best of luck with its Vega rocket, which has always been something of an odd duck in the launch industry. Now, as the rocket nears its final launch, it's missing some critical components.

The European Spaceflight newsletter reports that two of the four propellant tanks on the fourth stage of the Vega rocket-the upper stage, which is powered by dimethylhydrazine and nitrogen tetroxide fuel-went missing earlier this year.

Now, it seems that the propellant tanks have been found. However, the newsletter says, the tanks were recovered in a dismal state, crushed, alongside metal scraps in a landfill. Someone, apparently, had trashed the tanks. This is a rather big problem for Avio, as this was to be the final Vega rocket launched, and the production lines are now closed for this hardware.

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