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bluShift Aerospace

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bluShift Aerospace
Company typeLaunch services
IndustryAerospace
FoundedMarch 2014; 10 years ago (2014-03)
FoundersSascha Deri
Headquarters
74 Orion St.
Brunswick, Maine
,
United States
Key people
Sascha Deri, CEO
David Hayrikyan, CTO
Luke Saindon, SME
Brook Halvorson, LTE
Seth Lockman, CD
Brady Brim-DeForest, Chairman
Peter Murray, Board Member
ProductsHybrid rocket engines
Biofuel
Launch vehicles
ServicesSub-orbital and orbital transportation
Number of employees
12 (2022)
Websiteblushift.aero

BluShift Aerospace (sometimes stylized as bluShift Aerospace) is an employee-owned American aerospace firm based in Brunswick, Maine. Targeting the growing smallsat and cubesat launch markets, bluShift is developing suborbital sounding rockets and small-lift orbital rockets which will be launched from a proposed new spaceport in Maine. The company has received primary funding from NASAs SBIR grant program, the National Science Foundations I-Corps grant program, the Maine Technology Institute, and the Maine Space Grant Consortium.[1] The company has active operations at the former Brunswick Naval Air Station and Loring Air Force Base.[2]

History

[edit]

bluShift Aerospace was founded on the vision of rockets powered by a bio-derived fuel, making them safer for handlers and the environment. This new propulsion technology will allow bluShift to offer cost-competitive rideshares for small numbers of cubesats at a time, to client-preferred orbits, with low wait times to launch.[3] All of their vehicles currently in development will use their proprietary biofuel and liquid nitrous oxide as propellants in a hybrid rocket engine, with the size and number of engines scaling for different sized rockets.

Timeline

[edit]

In mid-2013, brothers Sascha and Justin Deri discovered an organic substance on Justin's farm in Maine; they began testing the substance as a potential rocket fuel. In March 2014, Sascha founded bluShift and began iteratively testing the new bio-derived solid fuel, sourced from the same organic substance found on his brother's farm.[1]

In 2016, the company moved from Massachusetts to Brunswick Landing in Maine.[4]

In 2017, bluShift optimized its biofuel formulation with the help of a grant from the Maine Technology Institute.[4]

In 2019, bluShift optimized its modular hybrid rocket engine with the help of a NASA SBIR grant.[3] State Senator Shenna Bellows sponsored legislation to support the development of a spaceport and launch site in Maine.[5] The company's first test launch was initially planned for 2019, but was postponed to early 2020. When the COVID-19 pandemic reached Maine in March 2020, the launch was postponed further, first being scheduled for 21 October 2020.[2]

In 2020, bluShift concluded its engine test firing campaign, with 154 successful static fires,[6] and attempted its first test launch. bluShift performed a low-altitude test launch of the Stardust rocket at the beginning of 2021,[7] marking the first commercial bio-fueled rocket launch, as well as the first commercial rocket launch in New England.[citation needed]

In March 2021, bluShift opened to public investment and funding, with a primary goal of US$500,000 and a secondary goal of US$1,070,000. As of July 2021 they had surpassed $620,000 in investments. In early September when the first round of investing closed, they had raised over $800,000. They opened a second round of investing in late 2021, and by April 2022 when that round ended, they had reached $1.1 million.[8]

In June 2021, bluShift announced they had received their first purchase order from Virginia-based company Max IQ to launch scientific experiment payloads for universities and other research institutions. The agreement calls for up to 60 small satellites to be launched at a cadence of no less than twice per year.[9]

In October 2021 the company began constructing the full-scale MAREVL engine and performing a series of static fire tests, preceding the launch of Starless Rogue Beta, a scaled down version of the Starless Rogue suborbital launch vehicle. The first successful static fire of the full-scale MAREVL 2.0 engine was completed in March 2022. Several more static fire tests are planned for 2022.

In December 2021, after the team had scouted out locations earlier in the year, narrowed down a list of several potential sites on the coast of Hancock County and Washington County, and following the regulatory approval process with the local governments, the launch site was announced to be about 30 miles east of Bar Harbor near the towns of Jonesport and Beals.

In November 2023, bluShift participated in the inaugural Maine Space Conference in Portland, along with several other government, university, and private company participants in Maine's developing aerospace industry and from around New England, including bluShift partners Max IQ and Loring Commerce Center.[10][11] The event was organized by the state-owned Maine Space Corporation and the NASA Maine Space Grant Consortium, and is part of the Maine Space 2030 initiative to develop a Maine Space Complex, involving an operational spaceport and active network of industry and research participants around the state.[12]

In June of 2024, bluShift raised a $1.3M series seed in a round led by Houston based Late Stage Capital and Brady Brim-DeForest joined as Chairman. [13]

The company planned to begin launching to orbit by early 2025. Due to Maine's high latitude, their orbital rockets will launch to high-inclination and polar orbits.[14] They also are considering Wallops LC-1 and Cape Canaveral LC-48 as potential suborbital and low-inclination orbital launch sites, respectively, to use in the future.

Launch attempt history

[edit]
Launch No. Date/time Vehicle Customer/payload Launch site Apogee Duration Outcome
- 21 October 2020 Stardust Test Launch Stand, Brunswick Landing, Maine (4,500 ft planned) cancelled
First test launch attempt to be scheduled.[15][2] Was cancelled and rescheduled to December to complete additional tests and final production of first launch vehicle.
1 27 December 2020 07:00 ET Stardust 1.0 Kellogg Research Lab,
Rockets Insights,
Falmouth High School
Runway, Loring Commerce Center, Maine (4,000 ft planned) postponed
Second test launch attempt. Stardust design modified during final production to the "1.0" version. Launch site relocated to Loring Commerce Center near Limestone, Maine. Vehicle was vertical on launch stand, but launch was scrubbed due to unfavorable weather. However, the launch team performed several more engine and propellant tests, including a final static fire.
14 January 2021 07:00 ET Runway, Loring Commerce Center, Maine (4,000 ft planned) postponed
Third test launch attempt. Vehicle had passed all additional tests. Launch was scrubbed due to unfavorable weather and winds.
31 January 2021 14:45 ET Runway, Loring Commerce Center, Maine 1,250 m (4,100 ft) AGL ~2 minutes Success
Fourth attempt; first successful test launch. First countdown of the day at 7:00 ET resulted in failed ignition. After resetting the vehicle, the second countdown was held just minutes before launch due to wayward recreational snowmobilers entering the range. Third countdown resulted in successful vehicle launch, apogee, segment separation, both parachute deployments, and soft touchdown. Carried three payloads in 3U Cubesat form factor enclosures: two commercial customer payloads, from Kellogg Research Lab and Rockets Insights, and one academic, from the Falmouth, Maine High School.[16] Recovery teams on snowmobiles retrieved the rocket components safely. Team considered possibility of reuse of the vehicle, but instead disassembled and analyzed the hardware to aid in future rocket development.
- June 2021 Stardust 1.1 Runway, Loring Commerce Center, Maine (>1,500 m (4,900 ft) planned) cancelled
Was planned to be second test launch for further engineering development. Would reuse components of Stardust 1.0.
- August 2021 Stardust 2.0 Runway, Loring Commerce Center, Maine (>10,000 m (33,000 ft) planned) cancelled
Was planned to be third test launch for further engineering development.
2 NET Q2 2024 Starless Rogue Beta TBA TBA[a] TBA (>10 km (6.2 mi) planned) TBD (~5 minutes planned) Planned
Second test launch and first low-altitude launch of Starless Rogue; the company stated after the first launch of Stardust 1, it will launch its "first commercial rocket to space in 12-18 months" (late 2021-early 2022), but after design changes to the rocket and engine configuration, the launch date was pushed back further. Will be the first flight of the full-scale MAREVL 2.0 engine.
3 NET Q4 2024 Starless Rogue TBA Coastal Launch Pad, Washington County, Maine TBA (>100 km (62 mi) planned) TBD (~10 minutes planned) Planned
First launch to space for Starless Rogue, pending successful low altitude test launch of Starless Rogue Beta.
- NET 2024 Starless Rogue Max IQ[9] Coastal Launch Pad, Washington County, Maine TBA (>150 km (93 mi) planned) TBD (~10 minutes planned) Planned
First commercial launch of Starless Rogue with Max IQ experiment & research suborbital payload.
- NET 2025 Starless Rogue Northern Lights Space Exploration[9] Coastal Launch Pad, Washington County, Maine TBA (>150 km (93 mi) planned) TBD (~10 minutes planned) Planned
Commercial launch with Northern Lights Space Exploration payload.[17]
- NET 2025 Starless Rogue TBA LC-1, Wallops, Virginia TBA (>150 km (93 mi) planned) TBD (~10 minutes planned) Planned
First suborbital launch from Wallops.
- NET 2025 Red Dwarf TBA Coastal Launch Pad, Washington County, Maine TBA (>150 km (93 mi) Polar LEO planned) TBD Planned
First test launch of Red Dwarf to orbit.
- NET 2025 Red Dwarf Max IQ[9] Coastal Launch Pad, Washington County, Maine TBA (>200 km (120 mi) Polar LEO planned) TBD Planned
First commercial launch of Red Dwarf with Max IQ experiment & research satellites.
- NET 2025 Red Dwarf TBA LC-48, Cape Canaveral, Florida TBA (>200 km (120 mi) LEO planned) TBD Planned
First orbital launch from Cape Canaveral.

MAREVL engine

[edit]

All bluShift launch vehicles announced thus far will utilize and be based around the Modular Adaptable Rocket Engine for Vehicle Launch (MAREVL) engine in various configurations. This is a hybrid (solid fuel/liquid oxidizer) engine which will be scalable and modular, able to be used in clusters for different vehicle configurations.

MAREVL 2.0, the full-scale version to be used in Starless Rogue and Red Dwarf, is expected to produce 80 kilonewtons (18,000 lbf) of thrust and consume 30 kilograms (66 lb) of propellant (both fuel and oxidizer combined) per second.[18]

Engine testing

[edit]

MAREVL prototypes were test fired at the facility in Brunswick between 2014 and 2018 along with prototype mixtures of the biofuel. A scaled-down version completed its test firing campaign in 2019, and was subsequently used on the Stardust rocket. MAREVL 2.0 is currently undergoing a testing campaign, which the engineering team expects will include more than 20 static fire tests, which are performed on a custom engine testing mount built by the company at their facility in Brunswick. The first static fire test in its campaign, a ~5-second long burn of the full-scale MAREVL 2.0 engine, was completed in March 2022.

Launch vehicles

[edit]
Vehicle Launch sites Dimensions Range Payload Stages Launches Status
Stardust 1
  • Brunswick, ME
  • Loring, ME
H: 20 ft (6.1 m)
W: 14 in (0.36 m)
1.25 km (4,100 ft) 8 kg 1 1 Retired
Stardust 2
  • Brunswick, ME
  • Loring, ME
H: 22 ft (6.7 m)
W: 24 in (0.61 m)
15 km (50,000 ft) 30 kg 1 0 Halted
Starless Rogue Beta
  • Washington County, ME
  • Spaceport America, NM
H: 37 ft (11 m)
W: 24 in (0.61 m)
120 km (75 mi) 30 kg 1 0 Testing
Starless Rogue
  • Washington County, ME
  • Wallops LC-1, VA
H: 37 ft (11 m)
W: 30 in (0.76 m)
300 km (190 mi) 30 kg 1-2 0 Development
Red Dwarf
  • Washington County, ME
  • Wallops, VA
  • Cape Canaveral LC-48, FL
H: 78 ft (24 m)
W: 40 in (1.0 m)
~1,000 km (620 mi) LEO/SSO 100 kg 2-3 0 Development

Stardust

[edit]

Stardust rockets are launched from a mobile launch stand that is horizontal during transportation, then raised to vertical at the launch site. The truss on the stand is about 3 times the height of the rocket, and has flame diverters at the base. The launch stand and associated ground equipment is powered by several mobile solar electrical power units.[19]

Stardust 1

[edit]

A single-stage reusable prototype with 8 kg (18 lb) payload capacity that can reach maximum altitudes of up to 4,000 ft (1.2 km).[20] First successfully launched on 31 January 2021. There is a possibility of future Stardust 1 experimental launches with minor upgrades and changes.

Stardust 2

[edit]

Formerly planned single-stage reusable prototype, now appears to be replaced by Starless Rogue Beta. Payload capacity would have been 30 kg. Maximum altitude was expected to have been between 10 and 50 km (6–30 miles).[21]

Starless Rogue

[edit]

A two-stage suborbital launch vehicle, with the first stage consisting of a cluster of MAREVL engine units, and the upper stage and payload section similar to the Stardust 2 vehicle. Will provide about 6–10 minutes of microgravity for 30 kg (66 lb) payloads on suborbital trajectories of up to 250 km (155 mi). The vehicle can also serve as a hypersonics testbed.[22]

Starless Rogue Beta

[edit]

A scaled down version of Starless Rogue, with only a single stage with one MAREVL engine, used for high altitude and supersonic testing. Uses the smaller payload section based on Stardust 1; regular Starless Rogue has the larger payload section based on Stardust 2.

Red Dwarf

[edit]

A two-stage orbital launch vehicle with 100 kg (220 lb) payload capacity to low Earth orbit. The focus will be on polar and Sun-synchronous orbit orbits with an eventual biweekly launch cadence. First launch is planned for 2024.[23]

In February 2022, bluShift announced a breakthrough in optimization, which allowed the number of stages to be reduced from three to two, and allowed the estimated payload capacity to be more than tripled, from 30 kg (66 lb) to the current value.[24]

Brown Dwarf

[edit]

Was a planned multi-stage sub-orbital launch test vehicle to prepare for regular orbital operational launches with the Red Dwarf rocket. Appears to be no longer actively planned and its purpose replaced by the Stardust and Starless Rogue groups of vehicles.

Recovery and reusability

[edit]

BluShift demonstrated a simple parachute recovery system on their first suborbital launch of Stardust 1. The Stardust 1 rocket was ultimately not relaunched, instead only being used for post-flight analysis.

BluShift has stated that they plan to recover all stages and payload sections of their suborbital rockets, as well as the first and possibly second stages of their orbital rockets, using parachutes which allow the stages to soft-splashdown off the coast of Maine, where they will be recovered by modified lobster boats used by the recovery team. They expect the stages to endure atmospheric reentry without many issues due to relatively low speeds, and the effects of salt-water on the rocket hardware will be negligible and will not add significantly to the refurbishment time. They claim reusability has been designed into the rocket systems, such as eliminating extra propellant plumbing by using a hybrid rocket design with a solid fuel and liquid oxidizer.

See also

[edit]

Notes

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  1. ^ Either Coastal Launch Pad, Washington County, Maine or Vertical Launch Pad, Spaceport America, New Mexico

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "One Small Step for Maine". The Maine Mag. 2019-09-25. Retrieved 2020-10-27.
  2. ^ a b c Peters, Brooks (2020-09-29). "Brunswick aerospace company sets date for rocket launch". Press Herald. Retrieved 2020-10-27.
  3. ^ a b "Brunswick rocket company wins NASA grant". Mainebiz. Retrieved 2020-10-27.
  4. ^ a b LaClaire, Hannah (2019-07-03). "Brunswick aerospace company wins grant from NASA". Press Herald. Retrieved 2020-10-27.
  5. ^ @SaschaDeri (1 November 2019). "It was a pleasure to chat with Sen. Bellows who sees the unique potential Maine has in the $68B future market for s…" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  6. ^ "bluShift Hot Fire Tests - YouTube". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 2022-02-08.
  7. ^ "bluShift Aerospace launches its first rocket powered by biofuels". TechCrunch. February 2021. Retrieved 2024-05-24.
  8. ^ "BluShift Aerospace: World's 1st Carbon-Neutral Biofuel-Powered Small Space Launch Service".
  9. ^ a b c d Carter, C. Thacher (2021-06-24). "Brunswick aerospace company signs first major deal with Virginia-based firm". The Maine Mag. Retrieved 2021-06-25.
  10. ^ Guildford, David (2023-11-06). "Hundreds gather for first Maine Space Conference". News Center Maine. Retrieved 2023-11-09.
  11. ^ Bosquillon, Christophe (2023-11-08). "Maine Tackles The Global Space Economy". Space Watch Global. Retrieved 2023-11-09.
  12. ^ Gratz, Irwin. "Portland Conference Highlights Maine's Space Industry Potential". Maine Space 2030. Maine Public. Retrieved 2023-11-09.
  13. ^ Lafleur, Alyssa. "BluShift Aerospace Raises $1.3M Seed Round, Bolsters Satellite Launch Services". Space Impulse. Yahoo. Retrieved 2024-07-14.
  14. ^ Dwyer, Paul (5 March 2020). "Lawmakers look to make Maine leader in aerospace industry". wabi.tv. Retrieved 2020-10-27.
  15. ^ @bluShiftAero (29 August 2020). "Stardust 1.0 is launching in October! For more, subscribe to our newsletter at…" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  16. ^ "bluShift AeroSpace conducts test launch of prototype rocket engine Stardust 1.0". News Center Maine. Retrieved 2020-12-24.
  17. ^ Schreiber, Laurie (2022-10-05). "In $7M deal, BluShift signs Shackleton descendant for unconventional launches". Mainebiz. Retrieved 2022-10-05.
  18. ^ bluShift Aerospace - MAREVL 2.0 - Static Fire Test, 28 February 2022, retrieved 2022-03-01
  19. ^ "Solar and Rockets in Maine – A Match Made in the Heavens". altE Store. 10 March 2021. Retrieved 2021-03-10.
  20. ^ "Stardust". bluShift Aerospace. Retrieved 2022-02-08.
  21. ^ "Stardust Generation 2". bluShift Aerospace. Archived from the original on 2021-02-05. Retrieved 2021-01-14.
  22. ^ "Starless Rogue". bluShift Aerospace. Retrieved 2021-01-14.
  23. ^ "Red Dwarf". bluShift Aerospace. Retrieved 2021-01-14.
  24. ^ Major Breakthrough Triples our Payload & Revenue Capacity!, 4 February 2022, retrieved 2022-02-08
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