Hyperbola Hyperbola and Flightglobal will report further on this Emdrive propulsion system and its applications later this week but for now here is a picture of the spaceplane proposed by Emdrive’s UK inventor
CEAS 2009: The Emdrive spaceplane
by Rob Coppinger | Oct 27, 2009 | commercial launch services, Space Shuttle, Technology | 4 comments
About Seradata
Seradata produce the renowned Seradata database. Trusted by over 100 of the world’s leading Space organisations, Seradata is a fully queryable database used for market analysis, failure/risk assessment, spectrum analysis and space situational awareness (SSA).
For more information go to https://www.seradata.com/product/
Related Articles
During the Launch Services Executives panel session, Stephanie Bednarek, of SpaceX, said that the company intended to conduct 148 launches Read more
On the first day of the Satellite 2024 conference in Washington DC, executives from global launch providers sat down to Read more
Farah Ghouri and David Todd followed the launch, descent, landing and subsequent communications of the first private spacecraft lunar landing Read more
David Todd, Seradata’s head of space content, reviews ‘The Space Shuttle that Fell to Earth’, a new BBC documentary marking Read more
H3, Japan’s expendable rocket, has made its first successful flight. The feat comes a year after the rocket’s maiden flight Read more
Farah Ghouri finds out the status of the Lunar Pathfinder project, why the cubesat bubble is far from bursting, and Read more
NASA has announced a delay in its Artemis human missions to the Moon. Artemis II, originally scheduled for late 2024, Read more
Launching from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center, China, a Long March 2F rocket has reportedly successfully carried a Chinese reusable Read more
While staging in rocketry has been around since the 1940s, culminating in the first orbital success with Vostok rocket’s flight Read more
Recent Posts
- SATELLITE 2024: US launch providers put industry concerns about launch site availability to bed, for the most part
- SATELLITE 2024: Launch providers reveal how new rockets will meet market demands
- SATELLITE 2024: Intelsat CEO hints at in-orbit expansion plans and a terrestrial investment
- Good launch for Super Heavy/Starship on third flight…but re-entries and approaches did not go well
- Two launch failures: Japan’s new KAIROS rocket has not-unexpected maiden failure but unusual one for China’s Long March 2C (corrected)