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Reusable Launch System

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Reusable launch system



 
 
A reusable launch system (or reusable launch vehicle, RLV) is a launch system which is capable of launching a launch vehicle
Launch vehicle

In spaceflight, a launch vehicle or carrier rocket is a rocket used to carry a payload from the Earth's surface into outer space. A launch system includes the launch vehicle, the launch pad and other infrastructure....
 into space more than once. This contrasts with expendable launch system
Expendable launch system

An expendable launch system is a launch system that uses an expendable launch vehicle to carry a payload into space. The vehicles used in expendable launch systems are designed to be used only once , and their components are not recovered after launch....
s, where each launch vehicle is launched once and then discarded.

No true orbital
Orbital spaceflight

An orbital spaceflight is a spaceflight in which a spacecraft is placed on a trajectory where it could remain in outer space for at least one orbit....
 reusable launch system is currently in use. The closest example is the partially reusable Space Shuttle
Space Shuttle

NASA's Space Shuttle, officially called the Space Transportation System , is the spacecraft currently used by the United States government for its human spaceflight missions....
. The orbiter, which includes the main engines, and the two solid rocket booster
Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Booster

The Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Boosters are the pair of large solid rocket booster used by the Space Shuttle during the first two minutes of powered flight....
s, are reused after several months of refitting work for each launch.






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Encyclopedia


A reusable launch system (or reusable launch vehicle, RLV) is a launch system which is capable of launching a launch vehicle
Launch vehicle

In spaceflight, a launch vehicle or carrier rocket is a rocket used to carry a payload from the Earth's surface into outer space. A launch system includes the launch vehicle, the launch pad and other infrastructure....
 into space more than once. This contrasts with expendable launch system
Expendable launch system

An expendable launch system is a launch system that uses an expendable launch vehicle to carry a payload into space. The vehicles used in expendable launch systems are designed to be used only once , and their components are not recovered after launch....
s, where each launch vehicle is launched once and then discarded.

No true orbital
Orbital spaceflight

An orbital spaceflight is a spaceflight in which a spacecraft is placed on a trajectory where it could remain in outer space for at least one orbit....
 reusable launch system is currently in use. The closest example is the partially reusable Space Shuttle
Space Shuttle

NASA's Space Shuttle, officially called the Space Transportation System , is the spacecraft currently used by the United States government for its human spaceflight missions....
. The orbiter, which includes the main engines, and the two solid rocket booster
Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Booster

The Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Boosters are the pair of large solid rocket booster used by the Space Shuttle during the first two minutes of powered flight....
s, are reused after several months of refitting work for each launch. The external fuel drop tank
Space Shuttle external tank

A Space Shuttle External Tank is the component of the Space Shuttle launch vehicle that contains the liquid hydrogen fuel and liquid oxygen oxidizer....
 is discarded.

Orbital RLVs are thought to provide the possibility of low cost and highly reliable access to space. However, reusability implies weight penalties such as non-ablative
Atmospheric reentry

Atmospheric reentry refers to the movement of human-made or natural objects as they enter the atmosphere of a planet from outer space, in the case of Earth from an altitude above the "edge of space." This article primarily addresses the process of controlled reentry of vehicles which are intended to reach the planetary surface intact, but th...
 reentry
Atmospheric reentry

Atmospheric reentry refers to the movement of human-made or natural objects as they enter the atmosphere of a planet from outer space, in the case of Earth from an altitude above the "edge of space." This article primarily addresses the process of controlled reentry of vehicles which are intended to reach the planetary surface intact, but th...
 shielding and possibly a stronger structure to survive multiple uses, and given the lack of experience with these vehicles, the actual costs and reliability are yet to be seen.

History

As usual, science fiction preceded science fact in this area. In the early 1950s popular science fiction often depicted space launch vehicles as either single-stage reusable rocketships
Destination Moon (film)

Destination Moon is a 1950 United States science fiction feature film produced by George P?l, who later produced When Worlds Collide , The War of the Worlds , and The Time Machine ....
 which could launch and land vertically (SSTO VTVL), or single-stage reusable rocketplanes which could launch and land horizontally (SSTO HTHL).

The realities of early engine technology with low specific impulse
Specific impulse

Specific impulse is a way to describe the efficiency of rocket engine and jet engine engines. It represents the impulse per unit of propellant....
 or insufficient thrust-to-weight ratio
Thrust-to-weight ratio

Thrust-to-weight ratio is the ratio of thrust to weight of a rocket, jet engine, propeller engine, or a vehicle propelled by such an engine. It is a dimensionless quantity and is an indicator of the performance of the engine or vehicle....
 to escape our gravity well
Gravity well

In physics, a gravity well is the gravitational potential field around a massive body . Physical models of gravity wells are sometimes used to illustrate orbital mechanics....
, compounded by construction materials without adequate performance (strength
Strength of materials

In materials science, the strength of a material refers to the material's ability to withstand an applied stress without failure. Yield strength refers to the point on the engineering stress-strain curve beyond which the material begins deformation that cannot be reversed upon removal of the loading....
, stiffness
Stiffness

Stiffness is the resistance of an Elasticity body to deformation by an applied force. It is an intensive and extensive properties....
, heat resistance) and low weight seemingly rendered that original single-stage reusable vehicle vision impossible.

However advances in materials and engine technology have rendered this concept potentially feasible.

Before VTVL SSTO designs came the partially reusable multi-stage NEXUS launcher by Krafft Ehricke. The pioneer in the field of VTVL SSTO, Philip Bono
Philip Bono

Philip Bono was a Douglas Aircraft Company engineer. He was a pioneer of reusable launch system vertical landing single-stage to orbit launch vehicles....
, worked at Douglas
Douglas Aircraft Company

The Douglas Aircraft Company was an American aerospace manufacturer, based in Long Beach, California. It was founded in 1921 by Donald Wills Douglas, Sr....
. Bono proposed several launch vehicles including: , , , and . Most of his vehicles combined similar innovations to achieve SSTO capability. Bono proposed:
  • Plug nozzle
    Plug nozzle

    The plug nozzle is a type of rocket engine nozzle that belongs to a member of the class of altitude compensating nozzles much like the aerospike engine which, unlike traditional designs, maintains its efficiency at a wide range of altitudes....
     engines to retain high specific impulse at all altitudes.
  • Base first reentry which allowed the reuse of the engine as a heat shield, lowering required heat shield mass.
  • Use of spherical tanks and stubby shape to reduce vehicle structural mass further.
  • Use of drop tanks to increase range.
  • Use of in-orbit refueling to increase range.


Bono also proposed the use of his vehicles for space launch, rapid intercontinental military transport (Ithacus), rapid intercontinental civilian transport (Pegasus), even Moon and Mars missions (, ).

In Europe, Dietrich Koelle, inspired by Bono's SASSTO design, proposed his own VTVL vehicle named .

Before HTHL SSTO designs came Eugen Sänger
Eugen Sänger

Eugen S?nger was an Austrian-German aerospace engineer best known for his contributions to lifting body and ramjet technology....
 and his Silbervogel ("Silverbird") suborbital skip bomber. HTHL vehicles which can reach orbital velocity are harder to design than VTVL due to their higher vehicle structural weight. This led to several multi-stage prototypes such as an suborbital X-15. Aerospaceplane
Aerospaceplane

The US Air Force's aerospaceplane project encompassed a variety of projects from 1958 until 1963 to study a fully-reusable spaceplane. A variety of designs were studied during the lifetime of the project, including most of the early efforts on liquid air cycle engines and even a nuclear-powered ramjet....
 being one of the first HTHL SSTO concepts. Proposals have been made to make such a vehicle more viable including:
  • Rail boost.
  • Use of lifting body
    Lifting body

    The lifting body is an aircraft configuration where the body itself produces lift . It is related to flying wing which is a wing without a conventional fuselage....
     designs to reduce vehicle structural mass.
  • Use of in-flight refueling.


Other launch system configuration designs are possible such as horizontal launch with vertical landing (HTVL) and vertical launch with horizontal landing (VTHL). One of the few HTVL designs made is by Philip Bono. X-20 Dyna-Soar
X-20 Dyna-Soar

The X-20 Dyna-Soar was a United States Air Force program to develop a spaceplane that could be used for a variety of military missions, including reconnaissance, bomber, space rescue, satellite maintenance, and sabotage of enemy satellites....
 is one example of an early VTHL design.

The late 1960s saw the start of the Space Shuttle
Space Shuttle

NASA's Space Shuttle, officially called the Space Transportation System , is the spacecraft currently used by the United States government for its human spaceflight missions....
 design process. From an initial multitude of ideas a two-stage reusable VTHL design was pushed forward. That eventually ended up as a reusable orbiter with an expendable drop tank and reusable solid rocket
Solid rocket

A solid rocket or a solid-fuel rocket is a rocket with a motor that uses Rocket fuel#Solid propellants . The earliest rockets were solid fueled, powered by gunpowder, used by the Science and technology in China and Inventions in the Muslim world in warfare as early as the 13th century....
 boosters to reduce design expenses.

During the 1970s further VTVL and HTHL SSTO designs were proposed for solar power satellite and military applications. There was a VTVL SSTO by Boeing
Boeing

The Boeing Company is a major aerospace and defense corporation, originally founded by William Edward Boeing in Seattle, Washington. Boeing has expanded over the years, merging with McDonnell Douglas in 1997....
. HTHL SSTO designs included the Rockwell
Rockwell

Rockwell can refer to:...
  and the Boeing . However the focus of all space launch funding in the United States on the Shuttle killed off these prospects. The Soviet Union
Soviet Union

The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was a Constitution of the Soviet Union socialist state that existed in Eurasia from 1922 to 1991.The name is a translation of the , romanization of Russian Soyuz Sovetskikh Sotsialisticheskikh Respublik, abbreviated ????, SSSR....
 followed suit with Buran
Shuttle Buran

The Buran spacecraft , GRAU index 11F35 K1, was the only fully completed and operational space shuttle vehicle from the Soviet Buran program....
. Others preferred expendables for their lower design risk, and lower design cost.

Eventually the Shuttle was found to be expensive to maintain, even more expensive than an expendable launch system would have been. The cancellation of a Shuttle-Centaur rocket after the loss of Challenger
Space Shuttle Challenger

Space Shuttle Challenger was NASA's second Space Shuttle orbiter to be put into service, Space Shuttle Columbia being the first. Its maiden flight was on April 4, 1983, and it completed nine missions before breaking apart 73 seconds after the launch of its tenth mission, STS-51-L on January 28, 1986, resulting in the death of all seve...
 also caused an hiatus that would make it necessary for the United States military to scramble back towards expendables to launch their payloads. Many commercial satellite customers had switched to expendables even before that, due to unresponsiveness to customer concerns by the Shuttle launch system.

In 1986 President Ronald Reagan
Ronald Reagan

Ronald Wilson Reagan was the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States and the 33rd Governor of California . Born in Illinois, Reagan moved to Los Angeles, California in the 1930s, where he was an actor, president of the Screen Actors Guild , and a spokesman for General Electric ....
 called for an airbreathing scramjet
Scramjet

A scramjet is a variation of a ramjet distinguished by supersonic combustion. At higher speeds, it is necessary to combust supersonically to maximize the efficiency of the combustion process....
 plane to be built by the year 2000, called NASP/X-30 that would be capable of SSTO. Based on the research project copper canyon the project failed due to severe technical issues and was cancelled in 1993.

This research may have inspired the British HOTOL
HOTOL

HOTOL, for Horizontal Take-Off and Landing, was an unrealised United Kingdom space shuttle proposal.Designed as a single stage to orbit reusable winged launch vehicle, it was to be fitted with a unique air-breathing engine, the RB545, to be developed by Rolls-Royce plc....
 program, which rather than airbreathing to high hypersonic
Hypersonic

In aerodynamics, hypersonic speeds are speeds that are highly supersonic. Since the 1970s, the term has generally been assumed to refer to speeds of Mach number and above....
 speeds as with NASP, proposed to use a precooler up to Mach 5.5. The program's funding was canceled by the British government when the research identified some technical risks as well as indicating that that particular vehicle architecture would only be able to deliver a relatively small payload size to orbit.

When the Soviet Union imploded in the early nineties, the cost of Buran became untenable. Russia
Russia

Russia , or the Russian Federation , is a list of countries spanning more than one continent country extending over much of northern Eurasia....
 has only used pure expendables for space launch since.

The 1990s saw interest in developing new reusable vehicles. The military Strategic Defense Initiative
Strategic Defense Initiative

The Strategic Defense Initiative was a proposal by U.S. President Ronald Reagan on March 23, 1983 to use ground and space-based systems to protect the United States from attack by strategic nuclear weapon ballistic missiles....
 ("Star Wars") program "Brilliant Pebbles" required low cost, rapid turnaround space launch. From this requirement came the McDonnell Douglas
McDonnell Douglas

McDonnell Douglas was a major American aerospace manufacturer and defense contractor, producing a number of famous commercial and military aircraft....
 Delta Clipper VTVL SSTO proposal. The DC-X prototype for Delta Clipper demonstrated rapid turnaround time and that automatic computer control of such a vehicle was possible. It also demonstrated it was possible to make a reusable space launch vehicle which did not require a large standing army to maintain like the Shuttle.

In mid-1990, further British research and major reengineering to avoid deficiencies of the HOTOL design led to the far more promising Skylon design, with much greater payload.

From the commercial side, large satellite constellation
Satellite constellation

A group of Electronics satellites working in concert is known as a satellite constellation. Such a constellation can be considered to be a number of satellites with coordinated ground coverage, operating together under shared control, synchronised so that they overlap well in coverage and complement rather than interfere with other satelli...
s such as Iridium satellite constellation
Iridium satellite constellation

The Iridium satellite constellation is a large group of satellites used to provide voice and data coverage to satellite phones, pagers and integrated transceivers over Earth's entire surface....
 were proposed which also had low cost space access demands. This fueled a private launch industry, including partially reusable vehicle players, such as Kistler, and reusable vehicle players such as Rotary Rocket.

The end of that decade saw the implosion of the satellite constellation market with the bankruptcy of Iridium. In turn the nascent private launch industry collapsed. The fall of the Soviet Union eventually had political ripples which led to a scaling down of ballistic missile defense, including the demise of the "Brilliant Pebbles" program. The military decided to replace their aging expendable launcher workhorses, evolved from ballistic missile technology, with the EELV
EELV

The Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle is a United States government program, primarily a United States Department of Defense?sponsored effort begun in the 1990s....
 program. NASA proposed riskier reusable concepts to replace Shuttle, to be demonstrated under the X-33 and X-34 programs.

The 21st century saw rising costs and teething problems lead to the cancellation of both X-33 and X-34. Then the Space Shuttle Columbia disaster
Space Shuttle Columbia disaster

The Space Shuttle Columbia disaster occurred on February 1, 2003, when the Space Shuttle Columbia disintegrated over Texas during re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere, with the loss of all seven crew members, shortly before it was scheduled to conclude its 28th mission, STS-107....
 and another grounding of the fleet. The Shuttle design was now over 20 years old and in need of replacement. Meanwhile the military EELV program churned out a new generation of better expendables. The commercial satellite market is depressed due to a glut of cheap expendable rockets and there is a dearth of satellite payloads.

Against this dire backdrop came the Ansari X Prize
Ansari X Prize

The Ansari X PRIZE was a space competition in which the X PRIZE Foundation offered a United States dollar10,000,000 prize for the first Non-governmental organization to launch a reusable manned spaceflight into outer space twice within two weeks....
 contest, inspired by the aviation contests made in the early 20th century. Many private companies competed for the Ansari X Prize, the winner being Scaled Composites
Scaled Composites

Scaled Composites , formerly the Rutan Aircraft Factory, is an aerospace Aerospace manufacturer currently owned by Northrop Grumman that is located at the Mojave Spaceport, Mojave, California, United States and is headed by aircraft designer Burt Rutan....
 with their reusable HTHL SpaceShipOne
SpaceShipOne

SpaceShipOne is a spaceplane that completed the first privately funded human spaceflight on June 21, 2004. It was developed by Scaled Composites....
. It won the ten million dollars, by reaching 100 kilometers in altitude twice in a two week period with the equivalent of three people on board, with no more than ten percent of the non-fuel weight of the spacecraft replaced between flights. While SpaceShipOne is suborbital like the X-15, some hope the private sector can eventually develop reusable orbital vehicles given enough incentive. SpaceX
SpaceX

Space Exploration Technologies Corporation is an American space transportation startup company founded by PayPal co-founder Elon Musk. It is developing partially reusable rocket launchs - the Falcon 1 and Falcon 9 - and the SpaceX Dragon series of space capsules....
 is a recent player in the private launch market which has partially reusable vehicles.

Reusability concepts


Single stage

Single stage to orbit requires very lightweight structures, high efficiency engines and usually implies small margins. This tends to push up maintenance costs as component reliability can be impaired, and makes reuse more expensive to achieve.

Single stage to orbit also implies smaller payload size than multistage designs which increases the cost per kilogram of the payload.

Two or more stages to orbit


Two stage to orbit requires designing and building two independent vehicles and dealing with the interactions between them at launch. Usually the second stage in launch vehicle is 5-10 times smaller than the first stage, although in biamese and triamese approaches each vehicle is the same size.

In addition, the first stage needs to be returned to the launch site for it to be reused. This is usually proposed to be done by flying a compromise trajectory that keeps the first stage above or close to the launch site at all times, or by using small airbreathing engines to fly the vehicle back, or by recovering the first stage downrange and returning it some other way (often landing in the sea, and returning it by ship.) Most techniques involve some performance penalty; these can require the first stage to be several times larger for the same payload, although for recovery from downrange these penalties may be small.

The second stage is normally returned after flying one or more orbits and reentering.

Horizontal landing


In this case the vehicle requires wings and undercarriage (unless landing at sea). This typically requires about 9-12% of the landing vehicle to be wings; which in turn implies that the takeoff weight is higher and/or the payload smaller.

Concepts such as lifting bodies
Lifting body

The lifting body is an aircraft configuration where the body itself produces lift . It is related to flying wing which is a wing without a conventional fuselage....
 attempt to deal with the somewhat conflicting issues of reentry, hypersonic and subsonic flight; as does the delta wing
Delta wing

The delta wing is a wing planform in the form of a triangle, named after the Greek uppercase delta which is a triangle . Its use in the so called "tailless delta", i.e....
 shape of the Space Shuttle
Space Shuttle

NASA's Space Shuttle, officially called the Space Transportation System , is the spacecraft currently used by the United States government for its human spaceflight missions....
.

Vertical landing


Mcdonnell Douglas Dc Xa
Parachutes could be used to land vertically, either at sea, or with the use of small landing rockets, on land (as with Soyuz).

Alternatively rockets could be used to softland the vehicle on the ground from the subsonic speeds reached at low altitude (see DC-X). This typically requires about 10% of the landing weight of the vehicle to be propellant.

A slightly different approach to vertical landing is to use an autogyro
Autogyro

An autogyro is a type of rotorcraft invented by Juan de la Cierva in 1919, making its first successful flight on 9 January 1923, at Cuatro Vientos Airfield in Madrid....
 or helicopter
Helicopter

A helicopter is an aircraft that is Lift and propelled by one or more horizontal plane Helicopter rotors, each rotor consisting of two or more rotor blades....
 rotor. This requires perhaps 2-3% of the landing weight for the rotor.

Horizontal takeoff


The vehicle needs wings to take off. For reaching orbit, a 'wet wing' would often need to be used where the wing contains propellant. Around 9-12% of the vehicle takeoff weight is perhaps tied up in the wings.

Vertical takeoff


This is the traditional takeoff regime for pure rocket vehicles. Rockets are good for this regime, since they have a very high thrust/weight ratio (~100).

Airbreathing


Airbreathing approaches use the air for propulsion during ascent. The most commonly proposed approach is the scramjet
Scramjet

A scramjet is a variation of a ramjet distinguished by supersonic combustion. At higher speeds, it is necessary to combust supersonically to maximize the efficiency of the combustion process....
, but turborocket
Turborocket

A turborocket is a type of aircraft engine combining elements of a jet engine and a rocket.Once a jet engine goes high enough in an atmosphere, there is insufficient oxygen to burn the jet fuel....
, Liquid Air Cycle Engine
Liquid air cycle engine

A liquid air cycle engine is a spacecraft propulsion engine that attempts to gain efficiency by gathering part of its oxidizer from the Earth's atmosphere....
 (LACE) and precooled engines
Sabre

The sabre or saber is a kind of backsword that usually but not always has a curved, single-edged blade and a rather large Guard , covering the knuckles of the hand as well as the thumb and forefinger....
 are also proposed to be used.

In all cases the highest speed that airbreathing can reach is far short of orbital speed (about Mach 15 for Scramjets and Mach 5-6 for the other engine designs) and rockets would be used for the remaining 10-20 Mach for orbit.

The thermal situation for airbreathers (particularly scramjets) can be awkward; normal rockets fly steep initial trajectories to avoid drag, whereas scramjets would deliberately fly through relatively thick atmosphere at high speed generating enormous heating of the airframe. The thermal situation for the other airbreathing approaches is much more benign, although is not without its challenges.

Propellant


Hydrogen fuel

Hydrogen is often proposed since it has the highest exhaust velocity. However tankage and pump weights are high due to insulation and low propellant density; and this wipes out much of the advantage.

Still, the 'wet mass' of a hydrogen fuelled stage is lighter than an equivalent dense stage with the same payload and this can permit usage of wings, and is good for second stages.

Dense fuel

Dense fuel is sometimes proposed since, although it implies a heavier vehicle, the specific tankage and pump mass is much improved over hydrogen. Dense fuel is usually suggested for vertical takeoff vehicles, and is compatible with horizontal landing vehicles, since the vehicle is lighter than an equivalent hydrogen vehicle when empty of propellant. Non-cryogenic dense fuels also permit the storage of fuel in wing structures. Projects have been underway to densify existing fuel types through various techniques. These include slush technologies for cryogenics like hydrogen and propane. Another densifying method has been studied that would also increase the specific impulse of fuels. Adding finely powdered carbon, aluminum, titanium, and boron to hydrogen and kerosene have been studied. These additives increase the specific impulse (Isp) but also the density of the fuel. For instance, the French ONERA missile program tested boron with kerosene in gelled slurries, as well as embedded in paraffin, and demonstrated increases in volumetric specific impulse of between 20-100%.

Tripropellant

Dense fuel is optimal early on in a flight, since the thrust to weight of the engines is better due to higher density; this means the vehicle accelerates more quickly and reaches orbit sooner, reducing gravity losses
Gravity drag

In astrodynamics and rocketry, gravity drag is a measure of the loss in the net performance of a rocket while it is thrusting in a gravitational field....
.

However, for reaching orbital speed, hydrogen is a better fuel, since the high exhaust velocity and hence lower propellant mass reduces the take off weight.

Therefore tripropellant vehicles start off burning with dense fuel and transition to hydrogen. (In a sense the Space Shuttle
Space Shuttle

NASA's Space Shuttle, officially called the Space Transportation System , is the spacecraft currently used by the United States government for its human spaceflight missions....
 does this with its combination of solid rockets and main engines, but tripropellant vehicles usually carry their engines to orbit.)

Propellant costs
As with all current launch vehicles propellant costs for a rocket are much lower than the costs of the hardware. However, for reusable vehicles if the vehicles are successful, then the hardware is reused many times and this would bring the costs of the hardware down. In addition, reusable vehicles are frequently heavier and hence less propellant efficient, so the propellant costs could start to multiply up to the point where they become significant.

Launch assistance

Since rocket delta-v
Delta-v

In astrodynamics, the term delta-v, literally "change in velocity" , has a specific meaning: it is a scalar which takes units of speed that measures the amount of "effort" needed to carry out an orbital maneuver, i.e., to change from one trajectory to another....
 has a non linear relationship to mass fraction
Mass fraction

In aerospace engineering, the propellant mass fraction is a measure of a vehicle's performance, determined as the portion of the vehicle's mass which does not reach the destination....
 due to the rocket equation, any small reduction in delta-v gives a relatively large reduction in the required mass fraction; and starting a mission at higher altitude also helps.

Many systems have proposed the use of aircraft to gain some initial velocity and altitude; either by towing, carrying or even simply refueling a vehicle at altitude.

Various other launch assists have been proposed, such as ground based sleds, or maglev
Maglev

Maglev can refer to:* Magnetic levitation, a method by which an object is suspended using magnetic fields* Maglev , a form of rail transport that works using magnetic levitation...
 systems, high altitude (80km) maglev systems such as launch loop
Launch loop

A launch loop or Lofstrom loop is a design for a belt based maglev orbital launch system that would be around 2,000 km long and maintained at an altitude of up to 80 km ....
s, to more exotic systems such as tether propulsion
Tether propulsion

Tether propulsion systems are proposals to use long, very strong cables to change the velocity of spacecraft. The tethers may be used to initiate launch, complete launch, or alter the orbit of a spacecraft....
 systems to catch the vehicle at high altitude, or even Space Elevator
Space elevator

A space elevator is a proposed structure designed to transport material from a Astronomical object's surface into space. Many variants have been proposed, all of which involve traveling along a fixed structure instead of using rocket powered space launch....
s.

Reentry heat shields

Robert Zubrin
Robert Zubrin

Robert Zubrin is an American aerospace engineer and author, best known for his advocacy of manned Mars exploration. He was the driving force behind Mars Direct—a proposal intended to produce significant reductions in the cost and complexity of such a mission....
 has said that as a rough rule of thumb, 15% of the landed weight of a vehicle needs to be aerobraking reentry shielding.

Reentry heat shields on these vehicles are often proposed to be some sort of ceramic and/or carbon-carbon heat shields, or occasionally metallic heat shields (possibly using water cooling or some sort of relatively exotic rare earth metal.)

Some shields would be single use ablatives and would be discarded after reentry.

A newer Thermal Protection System (TPS) technology was first developed for use in steering fins on ICBM MIRVs. Given the need for such warheads to reenter the atmosphere swiftly and retain hypersonic velocities to sea level, researchers developed what are known as SHARP materials, typically hafnium diboride and zirconium diboride, whose thermal tolerance exceeds 3600 C. SHARP equipped vehicles can fly at Mach 11 at 30 km altitude and Mach 7 at sea level. The sharp-edged geometries permitted with these materials also eliminates plasma shock wave interference in radio communications during reentry. SHARP materials are very robust and would not require constant maintenance, as is the case with technologies like silica tiles, used on the Space Shuttle, which account for over half of that vehicles maintenance costs and turnaround time. The maintenance savings alone are thus a major factor in favor of using these materials for a reusable launch vehicle, whose raison d'etre is high flight rates for economical launch costs.

Weight

The weight of a reusable vehicle is almost invariably higher than an expendable that was made with the same materials, for a given payload, unless of course the vehicle is air-breathing for a significant portion of its flight regime, eliminating or reducing the need for oxidizer tankage.

R&D

The R&D costs of reusable vehicle are expected to be higher, because making a vehicle reusable implies making it robust enough to survive more than one use, which adds to the testing required. Increasing robustness is most easily done by adding weight; but this reduces performance and puts further pressure on the R&D to recoup this in some other way.

These extra costs must be recouped; and this pushes up the average cost of the vehicle.

Maintenance

Reusable launch systems require maintenance, which is often substantial. The Space Shuttle system requires extensive refurbishing between flights, primarily dealing with the silica tile TPS and the high performance LH2/LOX burning main engines. Both systems require a significant amount of detailed inspection, rebuilding and parts replacement between flights, and account for over 75% of the maintenance costs of the Shuttle system. These costs, far in excess of what had been anticipated when the system was constructed, have cut the maximum flight rate of Shuttle to 1/4 of that planned. This has also quadrupled the cost per pound of payload to orbit, making Shuttle economically infeasible in todays launch market for any but the largest payloads, for which there is no competition.

For any RLV technology to be successful, it must learn from the failings of Shuttle and overcome those failings with new technologies in the TPS and propulsion areas.

Manpower & Logistics

The Space Shuttle program requires a standing army of over 9,000 employees to maintain, refurbish, and relaunch the shuttle fleet, irrespective of flight rates. That manpower budget must be divided by the total number of flights per year. The fewer flights means the cost per flight goes up significantly. Streamlining the manpower requirements of any launch system is an essential part of making an RLV economical. Projects that have attempted to develop this ethic include the DC-X Delta Clipper project, as well as the current SpaceX Falcon 1 and Falcon 9 programs.

One issue mitigating against this drive for labor savings is government regulation. Given that NASA and USAF (as well as government programs in other countries) are the primary customers and sources of development capital, government regulatory requirements for oversight, paperwork, quality, safety, and other documentation tend to inflate the operational costs of any such system.

Orbital reusable launchers


Currently in use

  • Space Shuttle
    Space Shuttle

    NASA's Space Shuttle, officially called the Space Transportation System , is the spacecraft currently used by the United States government for its human spaceflight missions....
     (partially reusable)


Planned


  • PlanetSpace
    PlanetSpace

    PlanetSpace is a privately funded Chicago-based rocket and Spaceflight project founded by Geoff Sheerin, CEO of the Canadian Arrow corporation and Dr....
     Silver Dart (partly reusable spaceplane, based on hypersonic glider design)
  • SpaceX
    SpaceX

    Space Exploration Technologies Corporation is an American space transportation startup company founded by PayPal co-founder Elon Musk. It is developing partially reusable rocket launchs - the Falcon 1 and Falcon 9 - and the SpaceX Dragon series of space capsules....
     Falcon 1
    Falcon 1

    The Falcon 1 is a partially reusable launch system designed and manufactured by SpaceX. The two-stage-to-orbit rocket uses liquid oxygen/RP-1 for both stages, the first powered by a single Merlin engine and the second powered by a single Kestrel engine....
     (announced as partially reusable; fourth test flight on September 28 2008 reached orbit, but vehicle recovery has not yet been demonstrated)
  • SpaceX
    SpaceX

    Space Exploration Technologies Corporation is an American space transportation startup company founded by PayPal co-founder Elon Musk. It is developing partially reusable rocket launchs - the Falcon 1 and Falcon 9 - and the SpaceX Dragon series of space capsules....
     Falcon 5
    Falcon 5

    The Falcon 5 was a proposed two-stage-to-orbit partially reusable launch vehicle designed by SpaceX, since canceled and replaced by the Falcon 9....
    /Falcon 9
    Falcon 9

    The Falcon 9 is a reusable launch vehicle planned by SpaceX and scheduled to launch in 2009. Several variants are proposed with payloads of between 9,900 kg and 27,500 kg to low Earth orbit , and between 4,900 kg and 12,000 kg to geostationary transfer orbit....
     (announced as fully reusable; maiden flight scheduled for 4th quarter, 2008)
  • Reaction Engines Skylon an airbreathing SSTO spaceplane
  • Kistler Aerospace K-1
    K-1 Vehicle

    The K-1 launch vehicle was to be a two-stage, fully reusable aerospace vehicle in commercial development by Rocketplane Kistler. It was designed to accommodate a wide range of missions, including payload delivery to low-earth orbit , payload delivery to high-energy orbits with a K-1 Active Dispenser, technology demonstration flights, microgr...
     (maiden flight schedule not yet announced)
  • Hopper
    Hopper (spacecraft)

    Hopper was a proposed European Space Agency orbital and reusable launch vehicle. The shuttle prototype was one of several proposals for a European reusable launch vehicle planned to cheaply ferry satellites into orbit by 2015....
     (proposed reusable European launch system)
  • Avatar RLV
    Avatar RLV

    AVATAR is a single-stage reusable rocketplane which is capable of horizontal launch and land SSTO RLV being developed by India's Defense Research and Development Organization along with Indian Space Research Organization and other research institutions, which can be used for cheaper military and civilian satellite launches....
     (proposed reusable Indian launch system for small payloads)


Historical

  • Soviet Union
    Soviet Union

    The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics was a Constitution of the Soviet Union socialist state that existed in Eurasia from 1922 to 1991.The name is a translation of the , romanization of Russian Soyuz Sovetskikh Sotsialisticheskikh Respublik, abbreviated ????, SSSR....
     Energia
    Energia

    The Energia rocket was a Soviet Union rocket that was designed by NPO Energia to serve as a heavy-lift expendable launch system as well as a booster for the Buran ....
    -Buran
    Shuttle Buran

    The Buran spacecraft , GRAU index 11F35 K1, was the only fully completed and operational space shuttle vehicle from the Soviet Buran program....
     system (partially reusable)


Cancelled


  • Kliper
    Kliper

    Kliper is a partly reusable manned spacecraft, proposed by S.P. Korolev Rocket and Space Corporation Energia.Designed primarily to replace the Soyuz spacecraft, Kliper has been proposed in two versions: as a pure lifting body design and as spaceplane with small wings....
     (Russian-European partially reusable spacecraft that was to be launched around 2011 for the first time. It has been reported, however, that Energia is still working on the craft, and the Russian space program plans to review the decision to cancel the Kliper once they produce their now-planned modernized version of the Soyuz spacecraft
    Soyuz spacecraft

    Soyuz ; English: Union) is a series of spacecraft designed for the Soviet space program by the S.P. Korolev Rocket and Space Corporation Energia....
    . Thus, the Russian space program may decide to use it after all, and even so Energia may be able to market it to other space programs if they finish it)


  • Roton
    Rotary Rocket

    Rotary Rocket, Inc, was a rocketry company headquartered in a facility at Mojave Airport that developed the Roton concept in the late 1990s as a fully reusable SSTO manned spacecraft....
     Commercial launch vehicle- ran out of funds.


Suborbital reusable launchers


Planned

  • Aeronautics and Cosmonautics Romanian Association (ARCASPACE)
    ARCASPACE

    Asociatia Rom?na pentru Cosmonautica si Aeronautica or Romanian Cosmonautics and Aeronautics Association is a non-governmental organization that promotes aerospace projects as well as other space-related activities....
    : Orizont
  • Armadillo Aerospace
    Armadillo Aerospace

    Armadillo Aerospace is an aerospace startup company based in Mesquite, Texas. Its initial goal is to build a manned suborbital spacecraft capable of space tourism, but it has stated long-term ambitions of orbital spaceflight....
    : Black Armadillo
  • Canadian Arrow
    Canadian Arrow

    The Canadian Arrow is a privately funded rocket and space travel project founded by London, Ontario, Canada entrepreneurs Geoff Sheerin, Dan McKibbon and Chris Corke....
  • The da Vinci Project
    Da Vinci Project

    The da Vinci Project was a privately funded, volunteer-staffed attempt to launch a reusable manned suborbital spacecraft. It was a contender for the Ansari X PRIZE for the first non-governmental reusable manned spacecraft....
    : Wild Fire MK VI
  • Masten Space Systems
    Masten Space Systems

    Masten Space Systems is an aerospace startup company in Mojave, California that is developing a line of VTOL spacecraft for both unmanned research applications and eventually manned suborbital flight....
    : XA 1.0
  • Pablo de Leon & Associates: Gauchito
    Gauchito

    Gauchito may refer to:*The Football World Cup mascot.*A reusable launch system under development....
  • Rocketplane Limited's
    Rocketplane Limited, Inc.

    Rocketplane Limited, Inc. is an aerospace design and development company headquartered in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, with facilities in Guthrie, Oklahoma and Burns Flat, Oklahoma....
    : Rocketplane XP
    Rocketplane XP

    The Rocketplane XP is a suborbital spaceplane under development by Rocketplane Limited, Inc.. The vehicle is powered by two jet engines and a rocket engine, enabling it to reach suborbital space....
  • Space Adventures
    Space Adventures

    Space Adventures, Ltd. is a space tourism company that provides human space missions to the world marketplace. It is the only company that is sending private space explorers....
    : Explorer
    Space Adventures Explorer

    The Explorer spaceplane is a suborbital tourist spaceplane based on the Space Adventures C-21 design. The plane is being developed by Space Adventures with the Russian Federal Space Agency and is designed to carry 5 passengers....
  • Starchaser Industries: Starchaser V - Thunderstar
  • TGV Rockets
  • The Spaceship Company
    The Spaceship Company

    The Spaceship Company is a spacecraft manufacturing company formed by Burt Rutan and Richard Branson in mid-2005, jointly owned by Virgin Group and Scaled Composites, which will own the technology created by Scaled for Virgin Galactic's Virgin SpaceShip program....
    : SpaceShipTwo
    Scaled Composites SpaceShipTwo

    Scaled Composites' Model 339 SpaceShipTwo is a suborbital spaceplane for carrying space tourists, under development by The Spaceship Company, a joint venture between Scaled Composites and Richard Branson Virgin Group, as part of the Tier 1b program....
  • XCOR Aerospace
    XCOR Aerospace

    XCOR Aerospace is a private rocket engine and spaceflight development company based at the Mojave Spaceport in Mojave, California. XCOR was formed by former members of the Roton SSTO rocket engine development team in September, 1999....
    : Lynx rocketplane
    Lynx rocketplane

    The Lynx rocketplane is a rocket-powered aircraft being developed by the California-based company XCOR to compete in the future suborbital space flight market....


Historical

  • North American X-15
    North American X-15

    The North American Aviation X-15 rocket-powered aircraft was part of the X-plane of experimental aircraft, initiated with the Bell X-1, that were made for the USAF, the NASA, and the USN....
  • Scaled Composites
    Scaled Composites

    Scaled Composites , formerly the Rutan Aircraft Factory, is an aerospace Aerospace manufacturer currently owned by Northrop Grumman that is located at the Mojave Spaceport, Mojave, California, United States and is headed by aircraft designer Burt Rutan....
    : SpaceShipOne
    SpaceShipOne

    SpaceShipOne is a spaceplane that completed the first privately funded human spaceflight on June 21, 2004. It was developed by Scaled Composites....


Regulations

In 2006, the US Federal Aviation Administration
Federal Aviation Administration

The Federal Aviation Administration is an agency of the United States Department of Transportation with authority to regulate and oversee all aspects of civil aviation in the U.S....
 issued a new regulation regarding commercial reusable launch vehicles, both suborbital and orbital, as Part 431. The text can be found under the US Federal Code at . The new regulation was made in anticipation of planned commercial reusable launch operations including the American companies listed above. FAA regulations only have jurisdiction within the United States and its territories, and to aircraft and spacecraft registered in the United States.

External links