. Earth Science News .
SpaceDev Awarded Hybrid Rocket Motor Contract

File photo of a SpaceDev hybrid rocket motor test.

Poway CA (SPX) Nov 18, 2005
SpaceDev has been awarded a $2.7 million contract by the Air Force to begin work on a large hybrid rocket motor.

SpaceDev is to design, develop and test a small common booster capable of producing about 100,000 pounds of thrust, almost nine times that of the SpaceDev rocket motor technology used in Paul Allen's SpaceShipOne which won the $10 million Ansari X Prize last year. Test firings of the prototype rocket motor are to begin next year.

Under the contract, SpaceDev will be paid on a cost plus fixed fee basis related to the project. SpaceDev will own the technology that it develops, although the Air Force will retain certain licensing rights related to the technology.

SpaceDev anticipates that the technology will validate ground test configuration of critical elements of the hybrid motor, such as the injectors, igniters, the motor grain and insulation. The overall goal is to demonstrate successful ignition and operation of a booster stage hybrid motor that can produce a reliable and reproducible thrust profile, with high performance.

"We believe that this contract will enable us to improve in a cost-effective way on the technology we developed for the SpaceShipOne project," said SpaceDev founding chairman and chief executive, Jim Benson.

"We also believe that this technology will be another significant step toward developing our own reliable, low cost, safe cargo and crew vehicles, like our proposed SpaceDev Dream Chaser orbital human space transportation vehicle. We believe the technology can also be adapted for use alone as a sounding rocket or target in our proposed SpaceDev Streaker small launch vehicle family."

Related Links
SpaceDev
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express

Arianespace And ESA Meet Potential Vega Customers
Rome, Italy (ESA) Nov 15, 2005
The first Vega Customer Day, held in Rome on Thursday to raise awareness of, and confidence in, Europe's new small launcher, is a sure sign that Vega is on track for a qualification launch at the end of 2007.







  • Indonesia's Tsunami Early Warning System In Place: Officials
  • UK Agency Joins International 'Space and Major Disasters' Group
  • Aid Groups Issue Emergency Appeal As Winter Descends On Kashmir Quake Victims
  • India Fixes Dates With Pakistan For Quake Survivors To Cross Kashmir Border

  • Global Warming Producing 150,000 Deaths Annually: WHO
  • Rapid Warming Caused Vegetation Changes
  • Southern Ocean Search For Climate Futures
  • Water Vapor Feedback Is Rapidly Warming Europe

  • NPOESS $3Bn Over Budget, Three Years Delayed
  • Envisat Radar Protecting Patagonian Toothfish From Pirate Fishermen
  • First Remote Sensing Satellite To Be Launched In Late 2006
  • Deforestation Rate 'Alarming', But Net Loss Slowing: FAO

  • Analysis: Putin As Energy Czar
  • China, Japan Vie For African Oil
  • Biorenewables - Products For A Sustainable Future: York Leads The Way
  • Workshop to Help Gauge Nation's Energy and Water Concerns

  • Experts Fear Africa Flu Pandemic
  • Broad Stockpiling Advised For Pandemic
  • Bird Flu Crisis Escalating In China
  • New Asia Outbreaks, Multinationals Prepare

  • Outrage Forces Review Of Exotic Animal Meat Buffet
  • New Research Shows Aussie Lizards Are Poisonous Too
  • China Has Record 25 Pandas Born Through Artificial Insemination
  • It's King Kong... Well Almost

  • Nano World: Nano-Sponges For Toxic Metals
  • Thick Smog over Beijing, China
  • Health Warning As Beijing Pollution Hits Worst Level
  • Lagos Seals Up Rubber Recycling Firm Over Pollution Threat

  • One, Two, Threes not A, B, Cs
  • California Scientists Double Volume Of Data In NIH Biotech Repository
  • Flipped Genetic Sequences Illuminate Human Evolution And Disease
  • Color Perception Is Not In The Eye Of The Beholder: It's In The Brain

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement