Tech

Radian announces plans to build one of the holy grails of spaceflight

A rendering of the single-stage-to-orbit Radian One vehicle.

Enlarge / A rendering of the single-stage-to-orbit Radian One vehicle. (credit: Radian Aerospace)

A Washington-state based aerospace company has exited stealth mode by announcing plans to develop one of the holy grails of spaceflight—a single-stage-to-orbit space plane. Radian Aerospace said it is deep into the design of an airplane-like vehicle that could take off from a runway, ignite its rocket engines, spend time in orbit, and then return to Earth and land on a runway.

“We all understand how difficult this is,” said Livingston Holder, Radian’s co-founder, chief technology officer, and former head of the Future Space Transportation and X-33 program at Boeing.

On Wednesday, Radian announced that it had recently closed a $27.5 million round of seed funding, led by Fine Structure Vehicles. To date, Radian has raised about $32 million and has 18 full-time employees at its Renton, Washington, headquarters.

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