Los Angeles Times

Launch is a big boost for makers of small rockets

Huntington Beach firm sends three tiny satellites into orbit.

- By Samantha Masunaga

As Rocket Lab’s Electron rocket powered into orbit for the first time on Sunday it not only boosted the fortunes of the Huntington Beach company but also increased confidence in a new kind of dedicated launch vehicle.

Rocket Lab, like several other recent start-ups, focuses solely on the burgeoning small-satellite market, a sector of the space industry that has become increasing­ly popular because of cheaper manufactur­ing and launch costs.

These satellites currently hitch a ride into space alongside larger payloads on bigger rockets, such as SpaceX’s Falcon 9. But the attraction of Rocket Lab and its competitor­s is that small-satellite makers can dictate their launch time and orbit placement — a boon for companies planning to deploy so-called constellat­ions of hundreds or even thousands of tiny satellites.

With a successful launch and deployment of three small satellites into orbit, Rocket Lab’s weekend test flight is seen by the satellite firms as the realizatio­n of the hype about companies dedicated to such launches, said Bill Ostrove, aerospace and defense analyst at Forecast Internatio­nal.

On Sunday, Rocket Lab deployed three small satellites: two weather and shiptracki­ng satellites for data company Spire and one Earth-imaging satellite for Planet, a small-satellite network operator.

“There’s no way you can populate and replenish a constellat­ion if it takes you years to put up satellites and you can’t control where and when you go,” said David Cowan, a partner at venture capital firm Bessemer Venture Partners who led investment­s in Rocket Lab

and Spire. “So this entire idea that’s driving space today … it depends on an entirely different launch capability, one that’s small, cheap and frequent. As of this weekend, that’s now a market reality.”

Created in 2006 by New Zealand native Peter Beck, Rocket Lab has a wide array of financial backers, including venture capital firm Khosla Ventures and Lockheed Martin.

The company has said it relies on 3-D printing for all the primary components of its Rutherford rocket engine and advertises a launch price of about $5.7 million for a launch. The price of a launch on SpaceX’s much larger Falcon 9 rocket, which is aimed at a wider launch market, starts at $62 million.

“It started very modestly several years ago,” said Richard Rocket, chief executive of NewSpace Global, a research firm focused on commercial space companies. “But that it’s proven capable of sending at least some nano-satellites to orbit after only a couple of tests, it’s very impressive.”

Rocket Lab conducted its first test launch in May, when its Electron rocket reached space but didn’t reach orbit after the flight was terminated by range safety officials because of a problem with the ground equipment used to track the launch.

The company launches from its private complex on New Zealand’s Mahia Peninsula, a key aspect of the company’s plan to eventually launch as frequently as once a week. Rocket Lab said it was working toward a launch cadence of about once a month by the end of the year. Achieving a weekly launch pace so rapidly could be a challenge. Hawthorneb­ased SpaceX, which has turned around two launches in about 48 hours, managed 18 launches last year — a record for the 16-year-old company.

“While launching multiple times a month is feasible, it’s very difficult to launch every week still in 2018,” Rocket said. “I think that Rocket Lab has a really good shot at being able to do that if they keep things relatively small. Smaller satellites, smaller contracts, the opportunit­y to increase launch rates is commensura­te with that.”

Other small-satellite launch companies are also set to have a busy year.

Richard Branson’s Virgin Orbit, based in Long Beach, has said it began qualificat­ion for its LauncherOn­e service and flight tests for its 747-400 carrier aircraft that will launch satellite-tipped rockets from beneath a wing. The company has said the initial flight of LauncherOn­e is set for the first half of this year.

Tucson-based Vector Space Systems is planning to launch its first orbital flight test in July, after previously conducting several flight tests of its Vector-R rocket from as diverse locations as the intersecti­on of two deserted roads at a proposed commercial launch site in southern Georgia.

Both companies sent congratula­tory messages to Rocket Lab after Saturday’s launch.

While analysts expect the small-satellite launch market to be competitiv­e, Ostrove said there could be more than enough business to go around.

“At the rate it has been growing, I think there’s going to be a place for a lot of these players in the launch market,” he said. “I think Rocket Lab itself is in a pretty decent place because they were an early company — they sort of have a firstmover advantage.”

 ?? Rocket Lab via Associated Press ?? BY USING smaller rockets from start-ups such as Rocket Lab, makers of small satellites can pick their launch time and orbit placement. Above, Rocket Lab’s Electron rocker lifts off Sunday from New Zealand’s Mahia Peninsula.
Rocket Lab via Associated Press BY USING smaller rockets from start-ups such as Rocket Lab, makers of small satellites can pick their launch time and orbit placement. Above, Rocket Lab’s Electron rocker lifts off Sunday from New Zealand’s Mahia Peninsula.
 ?? Rocket Lab via Associated Press ?? ROCKET LAB hopes to eventually launch small satellites as often as once a week from its private complex in New Zealand. Above, launch operations Vice President Shaun D’Mello with an Electron rocket last month.
Rocket Lab via Associated Press ROCKET LAB hopes to eventually launch small satellites as often as once a week from its private complex in New Zealand. Above, launch operations Vice President Shaun D’Mello with an Electron rocket last month.

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