The New Zealand Herald

Rocket Lab’s first lunar-specific mission set to launch tonight

Rocket Lab’s Photon spacecraft will carry Nasa satellite to moon-orbit position

- Chris Keall

The first lunar mission to take-off from NZ soil could be close.

All going well, Rocket Lab will launch Nasa’s Capstone microsatel­lite on an Electron rocket from Mahia at 9.50pm tonight (in case of technical or weather delays, a launch window is open until July 27).

A small Rocket Lab spacecraft called the Photon will then ferry the microwave-size Capstone towards the moon, and place it in an experiment­al elliptical orbit lunar orbit.

If all goes to plan, Nasa will later put a small space station into the same orbit as a precursor to returning astronauts to the moon under the US space agency’s Artemis programme.

The cost of Artemis is stunning — some US$93 billion over 13 years.

Rocket Lab’s Capstone launch will cost Nasa just $14 million, however, as the Kiwi-American company again seeks to showcase its high-tech but low-cost smarts.

This launch is crucial for Rocket Lab because previous Photon has been used as a “space bus” that places micro-satellites into correct low-earth orbit. This will be the first time a Photon has headed to another celestial body.

It also marks an increasing­ly close Rocket Lab-Nasa relationsh­ip.

Rocket Lab has a number of projects in the pipeline, including a contract to design and built two Photon spacecraft that will go into orbit around Mars in 2024, after being carried to the red planet by a Nasaprovid­ed rocket. The mission’s aim is to shed light on how Mars lost its once-habitable atmosphere. Rocket Lab also recently won a contract to make a radiation-hardened solar panel array for Nasa’s Glide spacecraft, due to launch in 2025.

Glide (an acronym for Global Lyman-alpha Imagers of the Dynamic Exosphere) will survey the exosphere, the little-understood outermost layer of Earth’s atmosphere.

Rocket Lab did not put a value on the Glide contract, but it’s part of an ongoing push to diversify its revenue from rocket launches to a lot of business in “space systems” too. And it was possible because Rocket Lab bought SolAero, a New Mexico maker of solar components, for US$80m ($125m) last December — the fourth of a series of purchases of North American space system makers.

And Rocket Lab’s new Launch Complex 2 in Virginia — soon to see its first launch — sits inside Nasa’s Wallops Flight Facility.

The Capstone launch comes after a month of mixed fortunes for Rocket Lab’s rivals.

The Elon Musk-owned SpaceX managed two Falcon 9 launches within 15 hours (a rapid-fire capability Rocket Lab hopes to match with its recently opened second launchpad at Mahia), while a failed launch by Astra destroyed two Nasa satellites.

Rocket Lab shares, which reverselis­ted at US10.00 last August and shot to US18.69 the following month, were recently trading at US$4.10.

While it recently reported that its forward-bookings had fattened to US$550 million, and that it had won major funding from both the US military ($34m) and the state of Virginia ($69m) in support of its new, much larger Neuron rocket, due for its first launch in 2024, its stock has been caught up in the general Tech Wreck 2.0 downdraft.

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? The Electron rocket launch dress rehearsal for the Nasa moon-orbiting space station programme to be used by Artemis astronauts.
Photo / Supplied The Electron rocket launch dress rehearsal for the Nasa moon-orbiting space station programme to be used by Artemis astronauts.

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