
21 June 1989, during a summit meeting of the Soviet and Iranian leadership, Iran becomes the first Islamic country to announce plans to send a man into space. Soviet General Secretary
Gorbachov and Iranian President
Rafsanjani announce joint Soviet-Iranian missions to the Mir Space Station.
Unfortunately, the break-up of the Soviet Union less than a year later led to the
postponement of Iran's entry into the "space club", countries that have
successfully launched payloads into orbit. However, almost 20 years after Iran lost its
technological sponsor, 20 August 2008, the head of the Iran Aerospace Industries
Organization (
IAIO),
Reza Tagipour, announced that the Iranian government had made putting its first
Faza-Navard (Iranian astronaut) into space its top priority. Mr.
Tagipour said Iran had plans to set a date for initial rocket testing to begin within six months and the government set 2021 as the goal for manned-missions.
Iran launched its first satellite,
Sinah-1, on 28 October 2005. The Russian-built
Sinah-1 satellite was launched from the
Plesetsk Cosmodrome in Arkhangelsk, Russia and was lifted into orbit by Russian-built
Kosmos-3 booster rockets. The Russian-Iranian cooperation in space
technologies enabled Iran to become the 43rd nation to place a satellite into orbit, however, Iran has since launched satellites in partnership with several other Asian nations, most notably China and Thailand.
Iran has also developed its own satellite launch vehicle, the
Safir SLV, a 26 ton, two-stage rocket driven by all liquid-propellant systems. The first stage is capable of placing a payload package in low-earth orbit at an altitude of 68km; the second stage extends this range more than 40% and its new parachute package allows the payload to be recovered after re-entry. Iran began testing the
Safir SLV in late 2000, and by 2004 the Iranian Space Agency (ISA) announced the program would allow Iran to launch its first
domestically produced satellite, the
Omid (Persian for Hope). The
Omid was shot into orbit on 2 February 2009, making Iran the 9
th country to launch its own satellite using only
domestically produced
technologies.
The Iranian Space Agency, overseen by the Iranian Space Council (chaired by President Ahmadinejad), has three dedicated space centers. The older launch facilities,
Emamshahr and Qom, have been used to test Iranian
Shahab-3 LV rockets but are soon to be phased out as the ISA finishes moving into the new satellite launch center in
Semnan. The center at
Semnan opened 4 February 2008 with an inaugural launch of Iran's first sub-orbital
Safir-class rocket, the
Kavoshgar-1 (Explorer 1), and
Semnan is expected to become the primary Iranian space center.
Currently, Iran is testing a new solid-fuel rocket, the multi-stage
Ghadr-110, based upon the design of the
Shahab-3A. This new rocket will allow Iran to launch heavier payloads into much higher orbits and allow it to be used to transport cargo to the proposed Chinese space station, which as of now will be operated by China in conjunction with Iran and India. All of the rockets have military capability and may be diverted from the Iranian Space Agency into the Iranian nuclear program. Fortunately, such action would again postpone Iranian manned-missions and the Iranian government has declared Iran's space ambitions are purely peaceful and scientific.
- Country: Islamic Republic of Iran
- Agency Name: Iranian Space Agency (ISA)
- Launch-platform: Safir-class rocket, liquid fuel
- Unmanned capability: one of a handful of countries with the technology to carry out unilateral launches.
- Manned capability: none, planned to occur before 2021.
...and that's the way the cookie crumbles. - Jack