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Proton initially started life as a "super ICBM." It was designed to throw a 10-MT (or larger) nuclear warhead over a distance of 12,000 km. It was, of course, hugely oversized for an ICBM and was never used in such a capacity. Its real purpose was as a launch vehicle. Proton is fuelled by unsymmetrical dimethyl hydrazine and nitrogen tetroxide. These are hypergolic fuels which burn on contact, voiding the need for an ignition system. They are stored at ambient temperatures avoiding the need for low-temperature-tolerant components and also allowing the rocket to sit on the pad indefinitely without need for continuous topping up of boiling off cryogenic fuels. They are, however, very toxic fuels that require special handling care. Between the first flight in 1965 and 1970, the Proton was a very unreliable launcher causing the loss of many space vehicles. By the early 1970s the flaws were worked out and it became a very reliable rocket which it remains to this day. Proton launched the unmanned Soviet circumlunar flights and would very likely have launched the first humans to circle the Moon had the flight of Apollo 8 been conducted as originally planned (i.e. without going to Moon orbit). Proton launched the Salyut space stations, Mir core segment, and both Zarya and Zvezda of the ISS. It also launched many probes to the Moon, Mars, and Venus. Launch capacity to low Earth orbit is about 20 metric tons. Interplanetary transfer capacity is about 5–6 metric tons. Proton 8K82K Specifications
External link
de:Proton (Rakete) sv:Protonraket
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