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NASA

Rocket Lab Gets NASA Certification For Official Smallsat Launches (techcrunch.com) 7

Rocket Lab's Electron launch vehicle has received Category 1 certification from NASA, meaning it is authorized for use on more important missions, opening up a whole new revenue stream for the growing launch provider. TechCrunch reports: The certification was largely based on the success of "This One's for Pickering" in late 2018, the company's fourth commercial launch, which took a batch of NASA cubesats into orbit as part of the ELaNa-19 mission. This experimental mission was undertaken as part of NASA's Venture Class Launch Services initiative to test out newer and smaller launch vehicles using non-critical payloads.

Certification categories go from 1-3, from "high risk" to "low risk," based largely on successful launches, which as you might imagine is something of a catch-22: You need the launches to get the certification, but you need the certification to get the launches. Fortunately, one can break the cycle with non-essential missions like small experimental satellites -- which is sort of the purpose of the VCLS program. Category 2 certification is in process, but is of course even more stringent and requires six consecutive successful missions with the same rocket configuration. Rocket Lab has 10 in a row at present, but there's likely a lot of paperwork involved as well.

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Rocket Lab Gets NASA Certification For Official Smallsat Launches

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  • by lgw ( 121541 ) on Wednesday March 18, 2020 @02:20AM (#59843348) Journal

    Watching the lainches from their New Zealand site always makes me think "wow, the Hobbits have come a long way". It's a small rocket, but a modern one, with a modern, automated production line. If they can get reusability working, they might even stay competitive once SpaceX gets Starship working,

  • You keep linking to those videos -- "Ruptly" is the edgie, millennial angle for Russia today. I I know millennials really like that show, but I feel there needs to be a disclaimer for everybody else.
  • I wonder what kind of permit(s) were needed by that guy who splatted himself trying to get launched. Of course he probably didn't have any.

The 11 is for people with the pride of a 10 and the pocketbook of an 8. -- R.B. Greenberg [referring to PDPs?]

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