Category
page 1Solid-fuel rockets
Vega
retired European expendable orbital launch vehicle
solid-propellant rocket
rocket with a motor that uses solid propellants
Shavit-2
small-lift launch vehicle produced by Israel from 1982 onwards
Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Booster
solid propellant rocket used to launch NASA's Space Shuttle
Pegasus
air-launched rocket
Epsilon
Japanese satellite launch rocket
Scout
family of American rockets
Minotaur
family of American rockets
Minotaur-C
Minotaur-C (Minotaur Commercial), formerly known as Taurus or Taurus XL, is a four stage solid fueled launch vehicle built in the United States by Orbital Sciences (now Northrop Grumman) and launched from SLC-576E at California's Vandenberg Air Force Base. It is based on the air-launched Pegasus rocket from the same manufacturer, utilizing a "zeroth stage" in place of an airplane. The Minotaur-C is able to carry a maximum payload of around 1458 kg into a low Earth orbit (LEO).

M-V
The M-V rocket, also called M-5 or Mu-5, was a Japanese solid-fuel rocket designed to launch scientific satellites. It was a member of the Mu family of rockets. The Institute of Space and Astronautical Science (ISAS) began developing the M-V in 1990 at a cost of 15 billion yen. It has three stages and is high, in diameter, and weighs about . It was capable of launching a satellite weighing into an orbit as high as .
Black Brant
family of Canadian-designed sounding rockets
solid rocket booster
solid propellant motor used to augment the thrust of a rocket
Mu
series of Japanese solid-fueled carrier rockets
Castor
family of solid-fuel rocket stages and boosters
Lambda
series of Japanese rockets
Graphite-Epoxy Motor
solid rocket motor used for supplemental thrust on space launch vehicles
rocket candy
sugar-based rocket propellant
Lijian-1
series of Chinese solid-fuel rockets
Payload Assist Module
single-stage solid-fueled booster stage
Lambda 4S
expendable carrier rocket
Qaem 100
Iranian satellite expendable launch vehicle
Kappa
family of Japanese sounding rockets
Star 48
American solid rocket motor and stage developed by Thiokol
Ground-Based Interceptor
American anti-ballistic missile system
Vega C
orbital launch vehicle by the European Space Agency
Pishgam
Pishgam (, "pioneer") is an Iranian 300-kilogramme space capsule and associated rocket ( Kavoshgar-Pishgam "Explorer-Pioneer"), which launched containing rhesus monkey and is part of a series of Iranian rocket launches containing biological cargo intended as precursors to human spaceflight.
Space One KAIROS
Japanese private small-lift orbital rocket
P120C
The P120C is a solid-fuel rocket motor developed for use as the first stage of the Vega-C launch vehicle and as strap-on boosters for the Ariane 6. It was developed by Europropulsion, a joint venture between Avio and ArianeGroup, for the European Space Agency (ESA). The designation "P120C" reflects key characteristics of the motor: "P" stands for poudre (French for 'powder'), referencing its solid propellant; "120" denotes the original target of 120 tonnes of propellant (later increased to nearly 142 tonnes); and "C" signifies its common use across multiple launch systems.
AJ-60A
AJ-60A is a solid rocket booster produced by Aerojet Rocketdyne. Up to 2020 they were used as strap-on boosters on all United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket configurations. They continue to be used on the Atlas V N22 configuration used to launch the Boeing Starliner.
Orión
family of Argentine sounding rockets
P80
retired European solid-fuel rocket stage
Castor A
Argentinian sound rocket
Rigel
rocket
Canopus 2
Argentine sub-orbital sounding rocket
UA1200
thumb|upright=1.3|Schematic of the UA1205 and UA1207 boosters
UA120 was a family of American solid rocket boosters, manufactured by the Chemical Systems Division of United Aircraft (later United Technologies Corporation). They were used as strap-on boosters for the Titan rocket family. Several variants existed, with a varying number of segments.
STAR
family of American rocket stages developed by Thiokol
Zefiro
family of European solid-fuel rocket stages