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Radian Aerospace

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Radian Aerospace
Company typePrivate incorporated company
IndustryAerospace
Founded2016; 8 years ago
FounderRichard Humphrey, Livingston L. Holder Jr., Jeff Feige, Curtis Gifford
HeadquartersSeattle, Washington
Websiteradianaerospace.com

Radian Aerospace is an American aerospace company based in Seattle, Washington. The company is developing a horizontal take-off/horizontal landing, single-stage-to-orbit, fully reusable spaceplane concept called Radian One.

History

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Radian was founded in 2016.[1] In January 2022, the company closed a $27.5 million seed round led by venture capital fund Fine Structure Ventures.[2]

In September 2024, Radian Aerospace completed ground tests of its subscale prototype flight vehicle called PFV01 in Abu Dhabi and begins flight tests.[3][4]

Radian One

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Radian released their latest vehicle design of Radian One to the public in April 2024.[5] Radian One is designed to carry up to five crew members to low Earth orbit, with as much as 5,000 pounds of payload going up and 10,000 pounds going down. The delta-winged plane will be launched from a rocket-powered sled. Radian claims it will be able to land on any 10,000 ft (3,000 m) runway and fly again in 48 hours.[6]

Target markets

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The company is focusing on research, space manufacturing, terrestrial observation, and rapid global delivery to Earth destinations. Radian has penned launch agreements with governments and commercial firms.[6]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Berger, Eric (January 19, 2022). "Radian announces plans to build one of the holy grails of spaceflight". Ars Technica.
  2. ^ "Radian Aerospace raises seed round to fund work on spaceplane". SpaceNews. January 19, 2022.
  3. ^ Aria Alamalhodaei (September 25, 2024). "Radian Aerospace completes ground tests of prototype space plane". TechCrunch.
  4. ^ Jeff Foust (September 25, 2024). "Radian Aerospace begins tests of spaceplane prototype". SpaceNews.
  5. ^ "Radian Aerospace updates its space plane design and hints at coming attractions". GeekWire. April 2, 2024.
  6. ^ a b Szondy, David (2022-01-24). "Radian One unveils plans for single-stage to orbit spaceplane". New Atlas. Retrieved 2022-01-26.
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