SpinLaunch is a spaceflight technology development company working on mass accelerator technology to move payloads to space.
SpinLaunch is a spaceflight technology company that is developing mass accelerator technology to move payloads to space. The company has raised $150 million in funding and has received recognition in the space industry. Their technology aims to reduce dependency on traditional chemical rockets by utilizing centrifugal force to accelerate rockets to reach low Earth orbit. If successful, this system could significantly lower the cost of access to space. SpinLaunch has conducted test flights and is continuing development at their headquarters in Long Beach and their flight test facility at Spaceport America.
The company SpinLaunch is based in the United States.
The founder of SpinLaunch is Jonathan Yaney.
SpinLaunch has raised a total of US$150 million in funding. Some of the notable investors include Kleiner Perkins, Google Ventures, Airbus Ventures, ATW Partners, Catapult Ventures, Lauder Partners, John Doerr, and the Byers Family.[4][5]
The official website of SpinLaunch is https://www.spinlaunch.com/.
SpinLaunch is a spaceflight technology development company working on mass accelerator technology to move payloads to space.[3] As of September 2022, the company has raised US$150 million in funding, with investors including Kleiner Perkins, Google Ventures, Airbus Ventures, ATW Partners, Catapult Ventures, Lauder Partners, John Doerr, and the Byers Family.[4][5]
History
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SpinLaunch was founded in 2014 by Jonathan Yaney in Sunnyvale, California. The company's headquarters are in Long Beach.[6] In 2020 it opened a launch site. SpinLaunch continued development of its 140,000 square-foot (13,000 m2) corporate headquarters in Long Beach, and of its flight test facility at Spaceport America in New Mexico.[7]
In late 2021, SpinLaunch was named one of the "World's Best Employers in the Space Industry" by Everything Space, a recruitment platform specializing in the space industry.[8]
In March 2022, SpinLaunch was listed as one of the Top 100 Most Influential Companies of 2022 by Time Magazine. In April, SpinLaunch received a launch contract from NASA to test a payload.[9][10]
In May, 2024, SpinLaunch named Chief Operating Officer David Wrenn as Chief Executive Officer, replacing Jonathan Yaney. No specific rationale for Yaney's "completed" departure from SpinLaunch was provided.[11]
Technology
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SpinLaunch is developing a kinetic energy space launch system that aims to reduce dependency on traditional chemical rockets, with the goal of significantly lowering the cost of access to space while increasing launch frequency. The system utilizes centrifugal force with slingshot action to accelerate rockets to eventually reach low Earth orbit. The vacuum-sealed centrifuge is able to spin a rocket at speeds of up to 4,700 mph (7,500 km/h; 2.1 km/s) before releasing it on a trajectory path headed towards low Earth orbit. Once the rocket reaches an altitude of roughly 200,000 ft (60 km), the rocket would then ignite its engines in order to reach an orbital speed of 17,150 mph (27,600 km/h; 7.666 km/s). Such rockets would be able to carry payloads of up to 440 lb (200 kg), with a peak centrifugal acceleration of approximately 10,000 g.[12] Historical predecessors of this system include centrifugal guns.
If successful, the centrifuge sling launch concept is projected to lower the cost of launches and use less power, with the price of a single space launch potentially reduced by a factor of 20 to under US$500,000.[13][14]
Considerations
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Limitations
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Any equipment or goods delivered by SpinLaunch must be capable of withstanding up to 10,000 G's of force for 30 minutes during the centrifugal acceleration process. Additionally, no more than 880 lb (400 kg) of payload can be sent per launch.[15]
Advantages
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SpinLaunch's projected cost per kg of payload is approximately $1,250 - $2,500. This projection is significantly less expensive than SpaceX's current price per kg of payload on the Falcon 9 of $6,000. SpaceX's projected cost per kg on Starship, however, is less than $1,000 per kg. What real costs and prices for either SpinLaunch or Starship remains to be seen.[15]
Flight testing
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- On October 22, 2021 at its Spaceport America facility in New Mexico, SpinLaunch conducted its first vertical test of their accelerator at 20% of its full power capacity, hurling a 10-foot-long (3.0 m) passive projectile to an altitude of "tens of thousands of feet." This test accelerator is 108 ft (33 m) in diameter, which makes it a one-third scale of the operational system that is being designed. The company's first 10 test flights reached as much as 30,000 feet (9,100 m) in altitude.
- A September 2022 test flight successfully carried payloads from NASA, Airbus US, Cornell Engineering’s Space Systems Design Studio (SSDS), and from Outpost. The flight followed the trajectory that had been laid in for it. After the flight all contents of the payload were inspected and found to be in good order.
- As of July 2024, no further test flights or other technological accomplishments have been reported by SpinLaunch since its 2022 test flight.
See also
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- Launch service provider
- Non-rocket spacelaunch
- Outline of space technology
- Reusable launch system
- Space gun
- High Altitude Research Facility
- Centrifugal gun
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External links
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