From Wikipedia, “Skylon is a proposal by Reaction Engines Limited (managed by British rocket scientist Alan Bond) for a single-stage, turbojet-based, airbreathing orbital spaceplane.”
The project has just been handed £6million from the ESA for research and development, and apparently could be flying in just 10 years. It’s designed to take off and land like a normal plane, using turbojets in the atmosphere before switching to a hydrogen rocket to boost it into orbit. It could also cut current launch costs by a factor of 10. Seems almost too good to be true, and I’m curious what the catch is. Potential shuttle replacement? Or could it lead to ESA manned spaceflight? My favorite part is how the name sounds like cylon, would be nice if that was intended... Anyways, here’s a link to an article about it from the register, with a neat animation thrown in:
Skylon gets ESA Pennies
Discuss...
The project has just been handed £6million from the ESA for research and development, and apparently could be flying in just 10 years. It’s designed to take off and land like a normal plane, using turbojets in the atmosphere before switching to a hydrogen rocket to boost it into orbit. It could also cut current launch costs by a factor of 10. Seems almost too good to be true, and I’m curious what the catch is. Potential shuttle replacement? Or could it lead to ESA manned spaceflight? My favorite part is how the name sounds like cylon, would be nice if that was intended... Anyways, here’s a link to an article about it from the register, with a neat animation thrown in:
Skylon gets ESA Pennies
Discuss...