NASA, DARPA Will Test
Nuclear Engine for Future Mars Missions
NASA and the Defense Advanced
Research Projects Agency (DARPA) announced Tuesday a
collaboration to demonstrate a nuclear thermal
rocket engine in space, an enabling capability for
NASA crewed missions to Mars.
NASA and DARPA will partner on
the Demonstration Rocket for Agile Cislunar
Operations, or DRACO, program. The non-reimbursable
agreement designed to benefit both agencies,
outlines roles, responsibilities, and processes
aimed at speeding up development efforts.
“NASA will work with our
long-term partner, DARPA, to develop and demonstrate
advanced nuclear thermal propulsion technology as
soon as 2027. With the help of this new technology,
astronauts could journey to and from deep space
faster than ever – a major capability to prepare for
crewed missions to Mars,” said NASA Administrator
Bill Nelson. “Congratulations to both NASA and DARPA
on this exciting investment, as we ignite the
future, together.”
Using a nuclear thermal rocket
allows for faster transit time, reducing risk for
astronauts. Reducing transit time is a key component
for human missions to Mars, as longer trips require
more supplies and more robust systems. Maturing
faster, more efficient transportation technology
will help NASA meet its Moon to Mars Objectives.
Other benefits to space travel
include increased science payload capacity and
higher power for instrumentation and communication.
In a nuclear thermal rocket engine, a fission
reactor is used to generate extremely high
temperatures. The engine transfers the heat produced
by the reactor to a liquid propellant, which is
expanded and exhausted through a nozzle to propel
the spacecraft. Nuclear thermal rockets can be three
or more times more efficient than conventional
chemical propulsion.
“NASA has a long history of
collaborating with DARPA on projects that enable our
respective missions, such as in-space servicing,”
said NASA Deputy Administrator Pam Melroy.
“Expanding our partnership to nuclear propulsion
will help drive forward NASA's goal to send humans
to Mars.”
Under the agreement, NASA’s
Space Technology Mission Directorate (STMD) will
lead technical development of the nuclear thermal
engine to be integrated with DARPA’s experimental
spacecraft. DARPA is acting as the contracting
authority for the development of the entire stage
and the engine, which includes the reactor. DARPA
will lead the overall program including rocket
systems integration and procurement, approvals,
scheduling, and security, cover safety and
liability, and ensure overall assembly and
integration of the engine with the spacecraft. Over
the course of the development, NASA and DARPA will
collaborate on assembly of the engine before the
in-space demonstration as early as 2027.
“DARPA and NASA have a long
history of fruitful collaboration in advancing
technologies for our respective goals, from the
Saturn V rocket that took humans to the Moon for the
first time to robotic servicing and refueling of
satellites,” said Dr. Stefanie Tompkins, director,
DARPA. “The space domain is critical to modern
commerce, scientific discovery, and national
security. The ability to accomplish leap-ahead
advances in space technology through the DRACO
nuclear thermal rocket program will be essential for
more efficiently and quickly transporting material
to the Moon and eventually, people to Mars.”
The last nuclear thermal rocket
engine tests conducted by the United States occurred
more than 50 years ago under NASA’s Nuclear Engine
for Rocket Vehicle Application and Rover projects.
“With this collaboration, we
will leverage our expertise gained from many
previous space nuclear power and propulsion
projects,” said Jim Reuter, associate administrator
for STMD. "Recent aerospace materials and
engineering advancements are enabling a new era for
space nuclear technology, and this flight
demonstration will be a major achievement toward
establishing a space transportation capability for
an Earth-Moon economy.”
NASA, the Department of Energy
(DOE), and industry are also developing advanced
space nuclear technologies for multiple initiatives
to harness power for space exploration. Through
NASA’s Fission Surface Power project, DOE awarded
three commercial design efforts to develop nuclear
power plant concepts that could be used on the
surface of the Moon and, later, Mars.
NASA and DOE are working
another commercial design effort to advance higher
temperature fission fuels and reactor designs as
part of a nuclear thermal propulsion engine. These
design efforts are still under development to
support a longer-range goal for increased engine
performance and will not be used for the DRACO
engine.