Может быть, это будет интересно:
http://hea-www.harvard.edu/~jcm/space/lvdb/ The JSR Launch Vehicle Database is an attempt to provide a complete listing of all types of space launch vehicle, both suborbital and orbital, and indicate relationships between them. An attempt has been made to estimate numerical parameters even when they are not available in the literature, on the grounds that some reasonable estimate is better than none and gives a general idea of the vehicle's size and power. However, I have not always done a serious search to get the best available values, and you should not prefer the figures given here to those in other sources. Indeed, the reader should be warned that all values are likely to have 10 percent errors, and those indicated with a question-mark have at least 20 percent errors, and often are merely ROM or WAG estimates. You have been warned.
I acknowledge the help of Joe King and Pat Ross at NSSDC, who provided access to the old World Data Center/Rockets and Satellites launch database, and Joel Powell, Jean-Jacques Serra, Vladimir Agapov, Phillip Clark, Peter Hunter, Jacques Tiziou and the late Geoff Perry for sharing data over the many years it took to assemble this information. Mark Cleary at Patrick AFB, Roger Launius at NASA HQ, Elaine Liston at the KSC archives, and Jeff Geiger at Vandenberg were among those who provided useful data, Above all, kudos to Carl Rigg who spent several months painstakingly comparing my data with his own extensive and independently constructed lists, and caught a large number of typos and errors. Thanks to Carl, I believe that this database is now as reliable a source for launch times, launch sites and vehicle types as any currently in existence.
The launch vehicle database consists of the following auxiliary files:
LV: the list of launch vehicles.
Stages: the list of rocket stages
LVStages: which stages make up a given LV
Family: a list of stage families.
This database forms the background data for a comprehensive launch list of 30000 launches. The launches include 4500 orbital launches, 20000 suborbital launches, and 5500 endoatmospheric flights.