OK, so you are saying that there is no electrical ignition of that motor?
No. The word
hypergolic, by definition, means that the two propellants ignite spontaneously on contact, with no igniter (heat, spark, etc) needed.
Most hypergolic rockets use some form of hydrazine as fuel and some relative of nitric acid as the oxidizer. Their advantage isn't so much that they don't require an ignition system, but that they can be stored indefinitely as liquids at room temperature. Kerosene can, but oxygen cannot. This is important on a long space mission.
Fuels such as aniline have been used in the past, but since the mid-1960s the three most common hypergolic fuels are straight hydrazine (N
2H
4), monomethyl hydrazine, MMH (replace one of the hydrogens in hydrazine with a methyl group, CH
3), and unsymmetrical dimethyl hydrazine, UDMH (replace both hydrogens on one end with methyl groups). All are highly toxic, carcinogenic and (obviously) flammable. At least they're water soluble, unlike gasoline and other hydrocarbons, so you can flush spills with lots of water.
The big service propulsion system engine on the CSM plus all the engines on the LM used a 50-50 mixture of straight hydrazine and UDMH called Aerozine-50; the CSM RCS used MMH.
Nitric acid itself was used as a hypergolic oxidizer for a time, but since the mid 1960s the oxidizer of choice has been nitrogen tetroxide, N
2O
4, an evil-looking (and smelling), highly toxic reddish-brown gas or liquid that's one of the major components of photochemical smog. If you look at videos of the recent Proton launch failure in Russia you'll see a big reddish-brown cloud on the edges of the fireball; that's nitrogen tetroxide.
Hypergolic fuels aren't much used in launch vehicles anymore (the Proton is one of the last, and I think the North Koreans are using them) because their extreme toxicity and reactivity make them difficult and expensive to handle. Technicians loading them into spacecraft have to wear special "scape" pressure suits in case of a leak. The Apollo ASTP crew nearly died from nitrogen tetroxide poisoning during descent when some got sucked into the cabin through an open vent. It's so toxic because it forms nitric acid on contact with water, which then eats your lungs out from the inside.
NASA has sponsored development of replacement propellants for some time, and most of the promising combinations use nitrous oxide, N
2O as oxidizer. Despite being made of the same elements as nitrogen tetroxide, nitrous oxide is vastly less toxic and corrosive; in fact, it's widely used as an anesthetic. But it's usually not hypergolic, so any engines that use it will need an ignition system. Its big advantage over liquid oxygen is that, like nitrogen tetroxide, it can be stored as a liquid at room temperature but under considerably more pressure.