The main objective of this paper is to briefly describe several orbital launches where space rockets of different types have either never made it to space or failed to deploy their payloads once they got there. The common denominator for a failure of each space rocket type, according to publicly available information provided by their management and sponsoring teams, was a launch anomaly. Based on the extremely short duration of all missions considered, the most probable mechanisms that caused orbital launch anomalies, in accordance to the MIRCE Science theory; have been induced into rockets by human actions during: design, production, assembly, transportation or launch processes. As the anomalies occurred on space rockets that are designed, produced and launched by different companies, located on different continents, it could be concluded that human errors are a generic phenomenon of the human race. The orbital launch anomalies observed in this paper are in agreement with the 5th Axiom of MIRCE Science that states, “Probability of human error in execution of any task is greater than zero”.
Jezdimir Knezevic, Orbital Launch Anomalies as Mechanisms of Motion of Space Rockets through MIRCE Space.