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V-2 rocket - Wikipedia
Teams from the Allied forces —the United States, the United Kingdom, France and the Soviet Union—raced to seize major German manufacturing facilities, procure the Germans' missile technology, and capture the V-2s' launching sites.
V-2 rocket | History, Inventor, & Facts | Britannica
Jan 16, 2025 · V-2 rocket, German ballistic missile of World War II, the forerunner of modern space rockets and long-range missiles. After the war, both the United States and the Soviet Union captured large numbers of V-2s and used them in research that led to the development of their missile and space programs.
V-2 Rocket > National Museum of the United States Air Force™ …
Powering the V-2 Rocket The German V-2 of WWII featured the largest and most powerful rocket engine up to that time. Very advanced for the 1940s, it paved the way toward more powerful rockets developed in the 1950s and later.
V-2 with Meillerwagen > National Museum of the United States …
After the war, the German rocket team and many captured missiles were brought to the United States, where V-2 technology helped to build the technological base for human spaceflight and advanced strategic missiles. The V-2 was the first practical modern ballistic missile.
List of V-2 test launches - Wikipedia
The list of V-2 test launches identifies World War II launches of the A4 rocket (renamed V-2 in 1944). Test launches were made at Peenemünde Test Stand VII, Blizna V-2 missile launch site and Tuchola Forest using experimental and production rockets fabricated at Peenemünde and at the Mittelwerk. Post-war launches were performed in Germany at Cuxhaven, in the USSR at Kapustin Yar, in the USA ...
White Sands V-2 Launching Site - U.S. National Park Service
The White Sands V-2 Launching Site, or Launch Complex 33, was developed specifically to accommodate V-2 rocket tests at the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico. The launch complex has two important structures: the old Army Blockhouse and the launching crane, also known as the Gantry Crane.
Wernher von Braun and the Nazi Rocket Program: An Interview …
A: The V-2 was a failure as a weapon but was a revolutionary breakthrough in rocket and missile technology that accelerated the coming of the intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) and the space launch vehicle by as much as a decade. That was true not only in the United States.
White Sands V-2 Launching Site - Wikipedia
The White Sands V-2 Launching Site, also known as Launch Complex 33 and originally as Army Launch Area Number 1, is an historic rocket launch complex at White Sands Missile Range in southern New Mexico.
Developed by the German rocket team led by Wernher von Braun and General Walter Dornberger, the V-2 was one of Hitler’s “Vengeance” weapons but came into use too late in the war to be of any...
German V-2 > National Museum of the United States Air Force™ …
In February 1949 an American WAC (Without Altitude Control) Corporal second stage rocket carried atop a modified V-2 booster sent a payload 250 miles into the vacuum of space on a short suborbital flight.