2020-02-10 Bloomberg Businessweek

(Darren Dugan) #1
21

PHOTOGRAPH BY JASON HENRY FOR BLOOMBERG BUSINESSWEEK; DATA: SPACEX, ROCKET LAB, ASTRA

The40-foot-long,4-foot-widerocketloomedover
thequietsuburbofAlameda,Calif.,onthemorn-
ingofJan.18,nearthePotteryBarnOutlet.A hand-
fulofengineersandmetalwrenchersgottowork
early,settinguptherocketandconnectingit toa
messofelectronicsandtubes.Thedevicestoodup
straight,withthehelpofsomeblackmetalscaffold-
ing.Itsbottomthirdgleamedaluminum;therest,
actor-teethwhite.Overthecourseoftheday,the
teampumpedinvariousgasesandliquidstopre-
paretherocket’svalves,chambers,andothercom-
ponentsfora crucialtest.
Shortlyaftermidnight,therocketwasreadyfor
anexercisecalleda coldflow,meanttoensurethat
itspropellanttankscanhandleliquidfuel.Oncethe
teamhadfilledtherocket,takentheneededmea-
surements,andcheckedforleaks,theysimplyevacu-
atedthemachinebyreleasinghugevolumesofliquid
nitrogenintotheair.Thethingaboutliquidnitro-
genis thatit mustbekeptsupercoldtoremainliq-
uid.It boiledinstantlyoncontactwiththeoutside
air,creatinga billowingwhite cloudthatstretched
outmorethan 200 yards.Withtheteam’sfloodlights
beamingdownonthetestsite,thisoddfogmonster
easilycouldhavebeenseenbyanyonelivinginthe
housesascloseas2,000feetaway.Soon,though,
therocketwastruckedofftowarditsnexttempo-
raryhome,a spaceportinKodiak,Alaska.
UntilspeakingwithBloombergBusinessweek,
Astra,the3-year-oldrocketstartupbehindthetest,
hadoperatedinsecret,nitrogencloudsaside.The
company’sfounderssaytheywanttobetheFedEx
Corp.ofspace.They’reaimingtocreatesmall,cheap
rocketsthatcanbemass-producedtofacilitatedaily
spaceflights,deliveringsatellitesintolow-Earthorbit
foraslittleas$1 millionperlaunch.If Astra’splanned
KodiakflightsucceedsonFeb.21,it willhaveput
a rocketintoorbitata record-settingpace.Chief
ExecutiveOfficerChrisKempsayshe’sfocusedless
on this one launch than on the logistics of creating
many more rockets. “We have taken a much broader
look at how we scale the business,” he says.
Going fast in the aerospace business is a rarity and
doesn’t usually work out so well. But the U.S. govern-
ment has made speedy rocket launches something
of a national priority, and Astra is a Department of
Defense darling right now. The Pentagon’s R&D arm,
the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or
Darpa, made Astra one of three finalists in a contest
called the Launch Challenge. The terms: Whichever
startup could send up two rockets from different loca-
tions with different payloads within a few weeks of
each other would win $12 million.
Astra is the only finalist still in the running. Virgin
Orbit LLC, part of billionaire Richard Branson’s

BloombergBusinessweek February10, 2020

Thesatellitehaulers

SpaceX’sFalcon 9
Payload 50,265lb.
Costperlaunch $62m
Height 230 feet

RocketLab’sElectron
Payload 331 to 496 lb.
Costperlaunch $7.5m
Height 56 feet

Astra
Payload 165 to 450 lb.
Costperlaunch $2.5m
Height 40 feet

 An Astra rocket
undergoes testing in
Alameda

TECHNOLOGY

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