DARPA Teams With Industry to Create Spaceplane
DARPA has created an Experimental Spaceplane (XS-1) to create a new paradigm for more routine, responsive, and affordable space operations. In an important step toward that goal, DARPA has awarded prime contracts for Phase 1 of XS-1 to three companies: The Boeing Company (working with Blue Origin, LLC), Masten Space Systems (working with XCOR Aerospace), and Northrop Grumman Corporation (working with Virgin Galactic).
The XS-1 program aims to develop a fully reusable unmanned vehicle that would provide aircraft-like access to space and deploy small satellites to orbit using expendable upper stages. XS-1 seeks to deploy small satellites faster and more affordably, and develop technology for next-generation hypersonic vehicles.
XS-1 envisions that a reusable first stage would fly to hypersonic speeds at a suborbital altitude. At that point, one or more expendable upper stages would separate and deploy a satellite into Low Earth Orbit (LEO). The reusable first stage would then return to Earth, land, and be prepared for the next flight.
Top Stories
INSIDERDefense
Army Launches CMOSS Prototyping Competition for Computer Chassis and Cards
ArticlesElectronics & Computers
Microchip’s New Microprocessor to Enable Generational Leap in Spaceflight...
INSIDERSoftware
The Future of Aerospace: Embracing Digital Transformation and Emerging...
ArticlesMaterials
Making a Material Difference in Aerospace & Defense Electronics
EditorialSoftware
Making Machines Software-Defined No Simple Task
INSIDERRF & Microwave Electronics
Germany's New Military Surveillance Jet Completes First Flight
Webcasts
Power
Phase Change Materials in Electric Vehicles: Trends and a Roadmap...
Automotive
Navigating Security in Automotive SoCs: How to Build Resilient...
Automotive
Is Hydrogen Propulsion Production-Ready?
Unmanned Systems
Countering the Evolving Challenge of Integrating UAS Into Civilian Airspace
Power
Designing an HVAC Modeling Workflow for Cabin Energy Management and XiL Testing
Defense
Best Practices for Developing Safe and Secure Modular Software