Boeing Wins Contract to Design
Airborne Satellite Vehicle
By Cheryl Sampson
What Boeing vehicle would hitch a ride on an F-15E, drop from the
aircraft, fire its engines and deploy microsatellites into space?
It’s a new satellite launch vehicle concept designed by Phantom
Works Advanced Space Exploration for the Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency (DARPA) called the Airborne Launch Assist Space
Access or ALASA.
Under an 11-month, $30.6-million contract with options to build
up to 12 of the 24-foot vehicles, Boeing and DARPA intend to test
the ability to cut the cost of routinely launching microsatellites
into orbit by 66 percent. According to DARPA, ALASA aims to develop
and employ radical advances in launch systems, leading to more
affordable and responsive space access compared to current military
and U.S. commercial launch operations.
Rockets today are designed using a number of stages, each with
its own engine and fuel tanks. The first stage is at the bottom and
is usually the largest, the second and subsequent upper stages are
above it, and normally decrease in size.
“As these stages are jettisoned (or dropped), the fuel tank and
engines are just thrown away. We developed a cost-effective design
by moving the engines forward on the launch vehicle. With our
design, the first and second stages are powered by the same engines,
reducing weight and complexity,” explained Steve Johnston, director,
Advanced Space Exploration.
The 24-foot (7.3-meter) ALASA vehicle is designed to attach under
an F-15E aircraft. Once the airplane reaches approximately 40,000
feet, it would release the ALASA vehicle. The vehicle would then
fire its four main engines and launch into low-Earth orbit to deploy
one or more microsatellites weighing up to a total of 100 pounds (45
kilograms).
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