Space Shuttle Orbital Maneuvering System
From Spacefaring
Q1263822
Q1263822
The Orbital Maneuvering System (OMS) is a system of hypergolic liquid-propellant rocket engines used on the Space Shuttle and the Orion spacecraft. Designed and manufactured in the United States by Aerojet, the system allowed the orbiter to perform various orbital maneuvers according to requirements of each mission profile: orbital injection after main engine cutoff, orbital corrections during flight, and the final deorbit burn for reentry. From STS-90 onwards the OMS were typically ignited part-way into the Shuttle's ascent for a few minutes to aid acceleration to orbital insertion. Notable exceptions were particularly high-altitude missions such as those supporting the Hubble Space Telescope (STS-31) or those with unusually heavy payloads such as Chandra (STS-93). An OMS dump burn also occurred on STS-51-F, as part of the Abort to Orbit procedure.
Wikimedia, Wikidata
OMS; OMS/RCS; Orbital Maneuvering System
Aerojet, United States,
United States, Dong Fang Hong 2, Ekran,
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Location: KML, Cluster Map, Maps,
| Type | Subtype | Date | Description | Notes | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| commons | image | OMS maneuvering engines | Commons | ||
| commons | image | STS-45 view of payload bay | Commons | ||
| commons | image | Moon Framed | Commons | ||
| commons | image | McCandless on Arm in Aft Payload Bay - GPN-2000-001075 | Commons | ||
| commons | image | STS51 EVA cropped | Commons | ||
| commons | image | Standing on the Edge of the Bay - GPN-2000-001099 | Commons | ||
| commons | image | Sts062-42-026 | Commons | ||
| commons | image | STS070-386-027 Thruster | Commons | ||
| commons | image | STS-40 Spacelab | Commons | ||
| commons | image | OMS pod | Commons | ||









