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Orbital Maneuvering System

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The Orbital Maneuvering System, or OMS, is a system of rocket engines used on the Space Shuttle for orbital injection and modifying its orbit. It consists of two "packs" at the back of the Shuttle, the large lumps on either side of the vertical stabilizer. Each pack contains a single hypergolic engine, based on the Service Propulsion System on the Apollo Service Module, with a thrust of 6,000 lbf (27 kN), which can be reused for 100 missions and is capable of 1,000 starts and 15 hours of firing. The OMS pods also contain the rear set of reaction control system (RCS) engines as well, which are referred to as the OMS/RCS.

Orbital maneuvering system can be used to describe any system for moving about in orbit, so the term is found in non-Shuttle related topics as well.

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Space Shuttle Program
Image:Shuttle Patch.png Main Articles: Space Shuttle program | Space Shuttle
Components: Orbiter | SRB | External Tank | SSME | OMS | Crawler Transporter
Orbiters: Enterprise | Columbia | Challenger | Discovery | Atlantis | Endeavour
Launch Sites: Kennedy Space Center LC-39 | Vandenberg Air Force Base SLC-6
Developments: Shuttle-Derived Launch Vehicle | Shuttle-C | Ares I | Ares V
Mockup Shuttles: Pathfinder | Explorer | America
Misc: Missions | Cancelled Missions | Decision | Crews | Abort modes | In Fiction


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