3 Space Start-Ups Just Won Defense Department Cash

Over its 30-year history, the U.S. Space Shuttle fleet flew 135 times and cost an estimated $209 billion. That works out to about one launch every three months, at a cost of $1.55 billion per launch -- a far cry from NASA's original goal of launching once per week, at a cost of $20 million per launch.

But you know what they say: If at first you don't succeed, hire DARPA to try again.

DARPA Launch Challenge inforgraphic
DARPA Launch Challenge inforgraphic

Image source: U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.

High hopes for small payloads

And DARPA -- the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency -- is trying again. Earlier this month, the Pentagon's mad scientists division announced a competition it's calling the "DARPA Launch Challenge". A select group of three privately owned space companies will attempt to demonstrate that they have what it takes to put a small payload in space on very short notice, and at a very cheap price -- as low as $2 million per mission. DARPA says its Launch Challenge aims to develop a capability for "on-demand, flexible, and responsive launch of small payloads" for the U.S. military.

How flexible does DARPA expect its contractors to be?

"Today, most military and government launches are ... planned years in advance and require large, fixed infrastructure," says Todd Master, the Launch Challenge program manager. But DARPA wants "to move to a more risk-accepting philosophy and a much faster pace." Thus, in the Launch Challenge competition, participants "will receive notice of the first launch site [only] a few weeks prior to launch and exact details on the payload and intended orbit just days before launch."

And it only gets harder from there. Assuming a participant launches its first payload successfully, it'll be asked to gear up again and launch a second time, from a different site, with a different payload, and aim for a different orbit just a few "days or weeks" later.

And, of course, they'll need to pinch pennies as well. Each participant receives $400,000 to start with, then $2 million more for a successful first launch, and $8 million, $9 million, or $10 million as a final payout upon successful second launch. (For comparison, some ULA launches in the U.S. cost as much as $350 million -- albeit with larger payloads.) The final amount will be determined by the size of the payload they put in orbit, how quickly they get it there, and how accurately they perform the mission.

So who will vie for these prizes? Three companies.

Virgin Orbit

Probably the highest profile of the three competitors by virtue of its name recognition and association with tech mogul Sir Richard Branson, Virgin Orbit will compete in the DARPA Launch Challenge through its subsidiary VOX Space -- set up in late 2017 specifically to win Defense Department space contracts for Virgin.