economie

NASA’s dream of a space plane could finally become reality

NASA’s proposed X-33 space plane

Demand for launching things into space — like satellites, which make everything from weather forecasting to GPS possible — is only increasing.

Rockets remain the best option for doing that, even though they’re “terribly inefficient and expensive,” according to NASA.

A typical rocket consists of multiple stages that are expensive to build and often discarded after one use.

Companies like SpaceX have revolutionized rocket technology and reduced costs with fleets of reusable rockets, like the Falcon 9.

But space planes, which require less fuel and no rocket stages, could offer another cheap, and more comfortable, alternative to space travel.

How Radian One could offer a cheap and comfortable ride to space

Radian One would use a two-mile-long rocket-powered sled to take off.

Unlike a rocket, which launches vertically, the concept for Radian One uses a rocket-powered sled.

The sled would carry the plane along a two-mile-long rail, accelerating it to a speed of 537 miles per hour, and then launching it toward space.

The plane would then fly the rest of the way with its own engines. Using the sled to reach launch speed reduces the amount of fuel that the space plane itself needs to carry, according to Radian’s website.

This airline-like ascent would be a more comfortable ride for passengers, according to Radian. The company also hopes that it could reduce the cost of spaceflight.

It’s unclear by how much, but for some idea, NASA hoped that its X-33 space plane would reduce the cost of sending a pound of payload into orbit from $10,000 to $1,000.

Radian One wouldn’t be a replacement for all rockets, though.

Radian’s space plane would be capable of carrying smaller payloads into space making it the equivalent of a pickup truck, he told CNN. Traditional rockets, Holder said, will likely remain for heavier payloads, making them the 18-wheelers in this analogy.

A full-size plane won’t take to the skies until 2028, and even then, the company doesn’t expect it to reach orbit just yet. But, if successful, Radian One could eventually present a cheap option for a growing segment of space travel.

Read the original article on Business Insider

https://www.businessinsider.com/radian-aerospace-to-test-space-plane-radian-one-model-this-year-2024-9