El Arenosillo
El Arenosillo Test Centre is the name of a rocket launch site for suborbital rockets managed by INTA, located near Mazagón in Spain. It is located in the province of Huelva, Andalucía, in the southwest coast of Spain. CEDEA is adjacent to the Center of Excellence for Unmanned Systems.
El Arenosillo is also the location of an autonomous astronomical observatory of the BOOTES network , with two domes and three telescopes.
Equipment
Among the main facilities that INTA has at CEDEA are :- Two automatic telemetry systems in S and L bands
- HF, UHF and VHF communications systems
- Airborne and maritime surveillance radars, NORTHCONTROL
- Mobile path radar, VITRO RIR 778X, 250 Kw
- Radar path, TRACOR RIR 779C, 1 Mw
- 1Mw VITRO RIR 778C mobile path radar with destruction command
- Three autonomous mobile optronic stations, MSP 2000, equipped with IR, TV, cinema and radar sensors
- Weather center with real-time information, satellite data reception and complete radiosonde system
- Control center where all the information necessary for the supervision and monitoring of a launching operation is centralized.
- Evaluation center: preparation, analysis and evaluation of reports
- Two high speed cameras
- Meteorological laboratory and probe balloons
- Presentation and conference room
- Telemetry, radar and optronic workshops
- Mechanical workshop, electrical workshop, sanitary service and warehouses
- Accommodation service for operations
- Laboratory for photographic processing
Pads
Incomplete list of launch pads:- Nike – Operational. Based on a modified Nike Hercules system
- Sermiat – Unoperational. Used for Centaure rockets
- Médano del Loro – Operational. Is an adjacent launch site managed by Spanish Army
Launch history
All rockets for atmospheric soundings in Spain are launched from El Arenosillo.
In 2015 Delft Aerospace Rocket Engineering broke the European altitude record for amateur rocketry by launching the Stratos II+ rocket to 21.5 km altitude from El Arenosillo.
On 1 March 2017, Zero 2 Infinity tested its first rocket, a Bloostar prototype, in El Arenosillo. A balloon took Bloostar to 25 km. At 25 km the ignition of the rocket took place. The goals of the mission were: validation of the telemetry systems in Space conditions, controlled ignition, stabilization of the rocket, monitoring of the launch sequence, parachute deployment, and finally, sea recovery. All these goals were achieved in full.
In 2020 PLD Space is expected to launch its first rocket Miura 1 from El Arenosillo.
Date | Vehicle | Payload | Launch pad | Result | Remarks |
15 October 1966 | Skua | INTA, Carabela 4 Aeronomy / test | ? | First launch, 81 km apogee | |
19 July 1969 | INTA-255 | ? | ? | ||
20 December 1969 | INTA-255 | ? | ? | ||
22 December 1970 | INTA-255 | ? | ? | ||
12 January 1974, 19:12 | Skylark | H-GR-58 | ? | ||
27 June 1976 | Black Brant IV | ASTRO-6, EUV radiation | ? | 720 km apogee | |
18 February 1981 | INTA-300 | ? | Nike | ||
7 April 1992 | INTA-100 | ? | ? | First launch of INTA-100. 120 km apogee | |
21 October 1993 | INTA-300B | ? | Nike | ||
16 April 1994 | INTA-300B | ? | Nike | ||
2015 | Stratos II+ | ? | ? | 21.5 km | |
1 March 2017 | Bloostar | ? | – | Bloostar first test | |
26 July 2018 | Stratos III | ? | ? | ||
11 April 2019 | Miura 5 | - | ? | Drop test 5 km | |
2020 | Miura 1 | Payload from ZARM | Médano del Loro | – | 153 km apogee planned |
Only some launches are listed here. For information on individual rockets, see the List of rockets launched from El Arenosillo.