N1 (rocket)

The N1 ( Russian : Н 1 , from Ракета-носитель , Raketa-Nositel , carrier) [3] was a super heavy-lift launch vehicle intended to deliver payloads beyond low Earth orbit , acting as the Soviet counterpart to the US Saturn V . [4] [5] It was designed with crewed extra-orbital travel in mind. Development work started on the N1 in 1959. [5] Its first stage is the most powerful rocket stage ever built. [6]

Page Revisions

Year Metadata Sections Top Words First Paragraph
2018

176745 characters

22 sections

48 paragraphs

7 images

456 internal links

47 external links

1. History

2. Description

3. Comparison with Saturn V

4. Development problems

5. N1 vehicles

6. Remains

7. Launch history

8. Confusion on L3 designation

9. See also

10. Notes

11. References

12. Bibliography

13. External links

n1 0.339

engines 0.308

nk 0.282

l3 0.226

korolev 0.226

kord 0.198

glushko 0.178

engine 0.174

stage 0.158

chelomei 0.153

launch 0.130

shut 0.122

7k 0.114

ur 0.114

soyuz 0.113

The N1 ( Russian : Н 1 , from Ракета-носитель , Raketa-Nositel , carrier) [3] was a super heavy-lift launch vehicle intended to deliver payloads beyond low Earth orbit , acting as the Soviet counterpart to the US Saturn V . [4] [5] It was designed with crewed extra-orbital travel in mind. Development work started on the N1 in 1959. [5] Its first stage is the most powerful rocket stage ever built. [6]

2017

172551 characters

22 sections

48 paragraphs

5 images

451 internal links

44 external links

1. History

2. Description

3. Comparison with Saturn V

4. Development problems

5. N1 vehicles

6. Remains

7. Launch history

8. Confusion on L3 designation

9. See also

10. Notes

11. References

12. Bibliography

13. External links

n1 0.339

engines 0.309

nk 0.283

l3 0.226

korolev 0.226

kord 0.198

glushko 0.179

engine 0.174

stage 0.158

chelomei 0.153

launch 0.124

shut 0.122

7k 0.114

ur 0.114

soyuz 0.114

The N1 ( Russian : Н 1 , from Ракета-носитель , Raketa-Nositel , carrier) [3] was a super heavy-lift launch vehicle intended to deliver payloads beyond low Earth orbit , acting as the Soviet counterpart to the US Saturn V . [4] [5] It was designed with crewed extra-orbital travel in mind. Development work started on the N1 in 1959. [5] Its first stage is the most powerful rocket stage ever built. [6]

2016

171590 characters

21 sections

48 paragraphs

5 images

450 internal links

43 external links

1. History

2. Description

3. Comparison with Saturn V

4. Development problems

5. N1 vehicles

6. Remains

7. Launch history

8. Confusion on L3 designation

9. See also

10. References

11. Bibliography

12. External links

n1 0.339

engines 0.308

nk 0.282

l3 0.225

korolev 0.225

kord 0.198

glushko 0.178

engine 0.173

stage 0.154

chelomei 0.153

launch 0.124

shutdown 0.117

rocket 0.115

7k 0.114

ur 0.114

The N1 ( Russian : Н1 , from Ракета-носитель , Raketa-Nositel , carrier) [3] was a super heavy-lift launch vehicle intended to deliver payloads beyond low Earth orbit , acting as the Soviet counterpart to the US Saturn V . [4] [5] It was designed with crewed extra-orbital travel in mind. Development work started on the N1 in 1959. [5] Its first stage is the most powerful rocket stage ever built. [6]

2015

169280 characters

15 sections

44 paragraphs

6 images

461 internal links

42 external links

1. History

2. Description

3. Comparison with Saturn V

4. Development problems

5. N1 vehicles

6. Remains

7. Launch history

8. Confusion on L3 designation

9. See also

10. References

11. External links

n1 0.368

engines 0.316

nk 0.277

korolev 0.245

l3 0.223

glushko 0.194

kord 0.184

stage 0.172

chelomei 0.166

engine 0.162

launch 0.135

rocket 0.133

ur 0.124

stages 0.116

shutdown 0.106

The N1 (Russian: Н1 – from Носитель:Nossitel, meaning "carrier") [3] was a heavy lift rocket intended to deliver payloads beyond low Earth orbit , acting as the Soviet counterpart to the NASA Saturn V rocket. [4] [5] This heavy lift booster had the capability of lifting very heavy loads into orbit, designed with crewed extra-orbital travel in mind. Development work started on the N1 in 1959. [5] Its first stage is the most powerful rocket stage ever built. [6]

2014

107209 characters

13 sections

33 paragraphs

5 images

442 internal links

19 external links

1. History

2. Description

3. Problems

4. N1 vehicles

5. Remains

6. Launch history

7. Confusion on L3/N1 designation

8. See also

9. References

10. External links

n1 0.434

nk 0.360

korolev 0.319

glushko 0.253

chelomei 0.217

l3 0.203

engines 0.189

ur 0.161

stage 0.138

rocket 0.130

engine 0.119

kerosene 0.102

launch 0.092

lk 0.090

design 0.090

The N1 was a heavy lift rocket intended to deliver payloads beyond low Earth orbit , acting as the Soviet counterpart to the NASA Saturn V rocket. [1] [2] This heavy lift booster had the capability of lifting very heavy loads into orbit, designed with manned extra-orbital travel in mind. Development work started on the N1 in 1959. [2] Its first stage is the most powerful rocket stage ever built. [3]

2013

105273 characters

13 sections

33 paragraphs

5 images

441 internal links

17 external links

1. History

2. Description

3. Problems

4. N1 vehicles

5. Remains

6. Launch history

7. Confusion on L3 designation

8. See also

9. References

10. External links

n1 0.414

korolev 0.341

nk 0.299

glushko 0.270

chelomei 0.231

l3 0.217

engines 0.202

ur 0.172

stage 0.141

rocket 0.133

kerosene 0.108

engine 0.105

lk 0.096

design 0.096

launch 0.094

The N-1 was a heavy lift rocket intended to deliver payloads beyond low Earth orbit , acting as the Soviet counterpart to the NASA Saturn V rocket. [1] [2] This heavy lift booster had the capability of lifting very heavy loads into orbit, designed with manned extra-orbital travel in mind. Development work started on the N-1 in 1959. [2] Its first stage is the most powerful rocket stage ever built. [3]

2012

103782 characters

13 sections

29 paragraphs

9 images

433 internal links

16 external links

1. History

2. Description

3. Problems

4. N1 vehicles

5. Remains

6. Launch history

7. Confusion on L3 designation

8. See also

9. References

10. External links

n1 0.394

korolev 0.355

nk 0.289

chelomei 0.241

l3 0.226

glushko 0.221

engines 0.220

ur 0.179

stage 0.140

rocket 0.120

engine 0.109

design 0.106

lk 0.100

lunar 0.097

circumlunar 0.097

The N-1 was a heavy lift rocket intended to deliver payloads beyond low Earth orbit , acting as the Soviet counterpart to the NASA Saturn V rocket. [1] [2] This heavy lift booster had the capability of lifting very heavy loads into orbit, designed with manned extra-orbital travel in mind. Development work started on the N-1 in 1959. [2] Its first stage is the most powerful rocket stage ever built. [3]

2011

101093 characters

13 sections

29 paragraphs

9 images

424 internal links

16 external links

1. History

2. Description

3. Problems

4. N1 vehicles

5. Remains

6. Launch history

7. Confusion on L3 designation

8. See also

9. References

10. External links

n1 0.395

korolev 0.357

nk 0.290

l3 0.243

chelomei 0.242

glushko 0.222

engines 0.221

ur 0.180

stage 0.128

rocket 0.115

engine 0.110

design 0.106

lk 0.101

lunar 0.098

circumlunar 0.097

N-1 was a heavy lift rocket intended to deliver payloads beyond low Earth orbit , acting as the Soviet counterpart to the NASA Saturn V rocket. [1] [2] This heavy lift booster had the capability of lifting very heavy loads into orbit, designed with manned extra-orbital travel in mind. Development work started on the N-1 in 1959. [2]

2010

95925 characters

12 sections

27 paragraphs

10 images

429 internal links

14 external links

1. History

2. Description

3. Problems

4. Remains

5. Launch history

6. Confusion on designation

7. See also

8. References

9. External links

n1 0.478

korolyov 0.420

nk 0.294

chelomei 0.245

engines 0.214

ur 0.182

l3 0.181

glushko 0.143

design 0.120

engine 0.095

lunar 0.092

stage 0.091

rocket 0.086

lk 0.082

mishin 0.082

N1 or N-1 or 11A52 (Н1, Н-1, 11А52 in Russian) was a secret Soviet rocket intended to send Soviet cosmonauts to the Moon . It is also known by NATO as the G-1e or SL-15 . The Soviet classified technical name N1 was an abbreviation from the Russian word носитель ( nositel' short for raketa-nositel' , "rocket booster"). 11A52 was an alphanumeric designation for the N1 on its design and production documents. No official public name for the N1, had it succeeded, was ever adopted. N1 was underfunded, undertested, and started several years after the Saturn V ; all four launch attempts failed to orbit, the program was suspended in 1974 and in 1976 cancelled officially. The N1 program (along with the rest of the Soviet manned moon programs ) was kept intensely secret until the arrival of glasnost . Information about the N1 was published in 1990 .

2009

94501 characters

12 sections

27 paragraphs

7 images

425 internal links

14 external links

1. History

2. Description

3. Problems

4. Remains

5. Launch history

6. Confusion on designation

7. See also

8. References

9. External links

n1 0.503

nk 0.309

korolev 0.304

chelomei 0.258

engines 0.225

ur 0.191

l3 0.190

glushko 0.150

design 0.126

engine 0.100

lunar 0.097

stage 0.095

n1f 0.095

lk 0.086

mishin 0.086

N1 or N-1 or 11A52 (Н1, Н-1, 11А52 in Russian) was a secret Soviet rocket intended to send Soviet cosmonauts to the Moon . It is also known in the West as the G-1e or SL-15 . The Soviet classified technical name N1 was an abbreviation from the Russian word носитель (nositel', "carrier"). 11A52 was an alphanumeric designation for the N1 on its design and production documents. No official public name for the N1, had it succeeded, was ever adopted. N1 was underfunded, undertested, and started several years after the Saturn V ; all four launch attempts failed catastrophically, and the project was cancelled in 1974 de-facto and in 1976 officially. The N1 program (along with the rest of the Soviet manned moon programs ) was kept intensely secret until the arrival of glasnost . Information about the N1 was published in 1990 .

2008

89197 characters

12 sections

27 paragraphs

6 images

434 internal links

12 external links

1. History

2. Description

3. Problems

4. Remains

5. Launch history

6. Note

7. See also

8. References

9. External links

n1 0.469

korolev 0.318

nk 0.298

chelomei 0.269

engines 0.225

ur 0.200

l3 0.199

glushko 0.157

design 0.118

engine 0.105

lunar 0.101

n1f 0.099

stage 0.093

lk 0.090

mishin 0.090

N1 or N-1 was the secret Soviet rocket intended to send Soviet cosmonauts to the Moon . It is also known in the west as the G-1e or SL-15 . The Soviet classified technical name N1 was an abbreviation from the Russian word 'носитель' ('carrier'). According to some sources, the official open name for the N1 had it succeeded was intended to be Raskat ('peal' in Russian) [ citation needed ] . It was underfunded, undertested, and started several years after the Saturn V ; all four launch attempts failed, and the project was officially cancelled in 1976.

2007

74138 characters

9 sections

27 paragraphs

5 images

417 internal links

12 external links

1. History

2. Description

3. Problems

4. Remains

5. Launch history

6. Note

7. See also

8. References

9. External links

n1 0.455

korolev 0.361

nk 0.308

engines 0.233

chelomei 0.232

l3 0.205

ur 0.186

glushko 0.139

design 0.122

engine 0.108

lunar 0.105

n1f 0.103

stage 0.096

mishin 0.093

rocket 0.083

N1 or N-1 was the secret Soviet rocket intended to send Soviet cosmonauts to the Moon . It is also known in the west as the G-1e or SL-15 . It was underfunded, undertested, and started several years after the Saturn V ; all four launch attempts failed, and the project was officially cancelled in 1976.

2006

55273 characters

9 sections

27 paragraphs

2 images

328 internal links

11 external links

1. History

2. Description

3. Problems

4. Remains

5. Launch history

6. Note

7. See also

8. References

9. External links

n1 0.456

korolev 0.362

nk 0.309

engines 0.233

chelomei 0.232

l3 0.206

ur 0.187

glushko 0.139

design 0.123

lunar 0.105

n1f 0.103

engine 0.100

stage 0.096

mishin 0.093

booster 0.079

N1 or N-1 was the Soviet rocket intended to send Soviet cosmonauts to the Moon , preferably ahead of the Americans . It is also known in the west as the G-1e or SL-15 . All four attempted launches failed, and the project was officially cancelled in 1976.

2005

11388 characters

3 sections

7 paragraphs

1 images

41 internal links

10 external links

1. Launch history

2. References

3. External links

n1 0.470

engines 0.310

nk 0.274

l3 0.199

rocket 0.185

mishin 0.185

russian 0.151

design 0.145

kistler 0.137

н1 0.137

aerojet 0.095

korolev 0.088

launches 0.087

test 0.082

stage 0.079

N1 or N-1 was the Soviet rocket intended to send Soviet cosmonauts to the Moon , preferably ahead of the Americans . Development of the N-1 began in 1956 with the intent of providing a heavy booster for Military Space Stations and a manned Mars flyby using a nuclear engine upper stage. When the US announced the goal of landing a man on the moon in 1961 the N1 was diverted to matching this objective. The Russian Moon rocket program was first led by Sergei Korolev until his death in 1966 and later by his deputy Vasily Mishin when Mishin became the head of Korolev's OKB-1 Design Bureau. However, the project seemed to be insufficiently funded, and was not a success.

2004

7687 characters

2 sections

8 paragraphs

1 images

24 internal links

10 external links

1. References

2. External links

n1 0.492

l3 0.347

rocket 0.207

kistler 0.191

nk 0.191

н1 0.191

russian 0.181

soviet 0.122

lunar 0.120

engines 0.118

motors 0.104

incidentally 0.096

cyrillic 0.096

lz 0.096

л3 0.096

N1 or N-1 was the Soviet rocket intended to send Soviet astronauts to the moon , preferably ahead of the Americans. The Russian moon rocket program was first led by Sergei Korolev until his death in 1966 and later by Vasily Mishin . However, the project was not a success.