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El Arenosillo

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7-511: El Arenosillo Test Centre (CEDEA) is the name of a rocket launch site for suborbital rockets managed by INTA , located in Moguer (Spain). It is located in the province of Huelva , Andalucía , in the southwest coast of Spain (37.1° N, 6.7° W). CEDEA is adjacent to the Center of Excellence for Unmanned Systems (CEUS). El Arenosillo is also the location of an autonomous astronomical observatory of

14-425: A list of rocket launch sites . Some of these sites are known as spaceports or cosmodromes. A single rocket launch is sufficient for inclusion in the table, as long as the site is properly documented through a reference. Missile locations with no launches are not included in the list. Proposed and planned sites and sites under construction are not included in the main tabulation, but may appear in condensed lists under

21-541: A total of 557 rockets were launched from this base, mainly of the Skua type for atmospheric soundings and in collaboration with other countries. Other rockets launched included Nike Cajun , Nike Apache , Centaure , Black Brant , Skylark , Petrel , Super Loki , INTA-255 , INTA-300 and INTA-300B . All rockets for atmospheric soundings in Spain are launched from El Arenosillo. In 2015 Delft Aerospace Rocket Engineering broke

28-553: The BOOTES network, with two domes and three telescopes. Among the main facilities that INTA has at CEDEA are (updated 2009): Complementing the above, the Center also has: In 2017 part of the equipment was damaged in a wildfire . In the years 2018 and 2019 INTA has dedicated part of its budget to replace damaged equipment. Incomplete list of launch pads: The first launch of a rocket from El Arenosillo took place 15 October 1966. Up to 1994

35-685: 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: (i) validation of the telemetry systems in Space conditions, (ii) controlled ignition, (iii) stabilization of

42-490: The rocket, (iv) monitoring of the launch sequence, (v) parachute deployment, and finally, (vi) sea recovery. All these goals were achieved in full. In 2023 PLD Space launched its first rocket Miura 1 from El Arenosillo. Only some launches are listed here. For information on individual rockets, see the List of rockets launched from El Arenosillo . Rocket launch site Download coordinates as: This article constitutes

49-854: The tables. A shorter list of spaceports for human spaceflight and satellite launches is available in the article Spaceport . Major/active spaceports are shown in bold . Note that some Russian cosmodromes appear in this section, some in the Europe section. Al-Abid (Operated by [REDACTED]   Russia ) (Partly operated by [REDACTED]   Russia ) Note that some European countries operate spaceports in Africa, South America, or other equatorial regions. These spaceports are listed in this article according to their geographical location. Some Russian-controlled launch sites are listed as being in Asia. Note that some Russian cosmodromes appear in this section, some in

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