Aevum hopes to improve
access to space with a novel launch system that can deliver payloads to orbit
with high frequency. Aevum solution to this was to develop what it says is the
biggest drone in the world, which can autonomously take off and land on runways
as short as one mile (1.6 km) long and requires only 8,000 square feet (743 sq
m) of hangar space.
The giant Ravn X drone
is 80 ft (24 m) long, 18 ft (5.5 m) tall, has a wingspan of 60 ft (18 m) and
uses the same jet fuel as a regular airplane.
Aevum says the Ravn X
is almost weather agnostic and can launch in nearly all conditions, while 70
percent of the drone is reusable, with the company eyeing something closer to
full reusability down the track.
The
Ravn X won’t require pilots onboard to operate, therefore removing the risk to
human life. Safety issues aside, Aevum says a full fleet of autonomous RavnX
vehicles will be capable of firing a payload into space every 180 minutes.
“Aevum is completely reimagining access
to space,” says Jay Skylus, founder and CEO of Aevum. “The current definition
of rocket science doesn’t work for us. With Aevum, everyone will be able to
say, ‘It is rocket science and I can do it.’ Aevum is pushing logistics to the
next generation with software and automation technologies.”
Aevum
may have just whipped the covers off its autonomous launch system, but says it
has already earned more than US$1 billion in launch contracts. Among its
customers is the US Space Force, which will use the Ravn X system to launch its
ASLON-45 mission to place a set of small satellites in low Earth orbit.
“I’m excited to see the bold innovation and responsiveness in development today by our small launch industry partners to support emerging warfighter needs,” says Lt. Col. Ryan Rose, Chief of the Space and Missile Systems Center’s Small Launch and Targets Division.
“The U.S.
Space Force is proactively partnering with industry to support U.S. space
superiority objectives. Having a robust U.S. industry providing responsive
launch capability is key to ensuring the U.S. Space Force can respond to future
threats.”
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