Manufacturer | IRGCASF |
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Country of origin | ![]() |
Used on | Qased Qaem-100 |
General characteristics | |
Diameter | 1 m (3 ft 3 in) |
Gross mass | 1,900 kg (4,200 lb) |
Associated stages | |
Comparable | Star 48 , Castor 30 |
Launch history | |
Status | Active |
Total launches | 5 |
Successes (stage only) | 5 |
Failed | 0 |
First flight | 22 April 2020 |
Salman upper-stage | |
Burn time | 60 seconds |
Propellant | Solid |
The Salman (Persian: سلمان) is a solid-propellant rocket motor designed and built by the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.[1][2] It is used as the second stage of the Qased and Qaem-100 satellite launch vehicles.[1][3] The system was announced on 9 February 2020[4] and was launched for the first time on 22 April 2020, placing Iran's first military satellite, named Noor, into orbit.[1][5]
Salman weighs 1,900 kilograms, has a diameter of 1 meter, and fires for 60 seconds. In contrast to previous Iranian commercial and military rocket designs, Salman has a wound carbon-fiber composite casing rather than the traditional steel motor casings typical of other Iranian designs, this drastically reduces weight and improves performance, allowing for more payload capacity.
Another break with past Iranian designs is the first ever use of gimballed thrust vector control (TVC) for steering as opposed to aerodynamic control surfaces, jet vanes, or vernier thrusters previously used.[5][6][7] A steerable nozzle provides several advantages to Salman as opposed to other methods that result in its superior performance and efficiency; as opposed to jet vanes, no thrust is lost in a gimballed system when steering; control surfaces only work in endo-atmospheric flight and cannot be used for injecting satellites or atmospheric re-entry; vernier thrusters and their associated piping, turbopumps and tanks are heavy and their omission could make way for a larger payload.[8]
Flight No. | Date | Rocket | Payload | Outcome | Remarks |
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1 | 22 April 2020 | Qased | Noor 1 | Success | Iran's first military reconnaissance satellite[9] |
2 | 8 March 2022 | Qased | Noor 2 | Success | |
3 | 5 November 2022[10] | Qaem-100 | Unknown | Success | Suborbital test flight |
4 | 4 March 2023[11] | Qaem-100 | Nahid-1 | Failure | |
5 | 27 September 2023[12] | Qased | Noor 3 | Success | |
6 | 20 January 2024 | Qaem-100 | Soraya | Success |
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Solid fuel |
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