British defense contractor BAE Systems, one of the world's foremost purveyors of futuristic
defense technologies, just officially announced that it plans to invest
roughly $31.7 million to help develop a hybrid rocket engine with
Britain's Reaction Engines Limited. If completed, the Synergistic
Air-Breathing Rocket Engine -- or SABRE for short -- would revolutionize
the industry of space travel with its ability to operate not only in
outer space, but within Earth's atmosphere as well. Though testing is
still likely many years out, the new cash infusion from BAE Systems will
allow REL to expand its research and officially complete a test model.
"This investment by BAE Systems reflects the strength
of British engineering and technology and our ambitions as a leading
space nation," says MP Jo Johnson,
the United Kingdom's Minister for Universities and Science. "I am sure
that this partnership will strengthen both organizations -- helping to
create more jobs in the UK's growing space sector and ultimately to make
the SABRE engine a reality."
In production since 1989, REL's SABRE engine has
garnered heaps of attention in recent years following the increasing
popularity commercial space travel. Seen by many in Britain as an
engineering marvel similar in hype to the unsuccessful Concorde, what
sets the engine apart is its compatibility with a wide range of
vehicles. Whereas REL intends to use it in its own space plane called
the Skylon, the tech doesn't have to exist solely on that craft to be functional.
According to REL's website,
the finished engine will boast the ability to fly aircraft into
single-stage orbit, allowing for what it calls "reliable, responsive,
and cost effective space access." Additionally, SABRE's other
arrangement would allow any vehicle outfitted with it to fly at speeds
roughly five times that of the speed of sound while inside Earth's
atmosphere. To achieve this, the engine features two different
operational modes: air-breathing mode and conventional rocket mode.
While in air-breathing mode, the SABRE sucks in atmospheric air to
absorb oxygen similar to how a regular jet engine does. It then burns
the oxygen with its on-board liquid hydrogen fuel stored in the rocket
combustion chamber. Upon leaving Earth's atmosphere, conventional rocket
mode kicks in, switching the engine to start using stored liquid oxygen
for the SABRE's continued thrust.
Perhaps REL's greatest breakthrough with the engine
was how the company developed a reliable system for the engine to avoid
amassing frost. Though the researchers remained secretive about the
actual method, it was recently revealed that the engine uses a
specially-engineered pre-cooler system to chill consumed air from over
1,800 degrees Fahrenheit down to negative 240 degrees Fahrenheit in
under .01 seconds. By using a methanol injection to function as the engine's antifreeze, REL was able to overcome one of the rocket's biggest obstacles.
As BAE Systems and REL continue to conduct research
and development on the innovative SABRE rocket, the hope is to begin
ground-based testing by as early as 2020, with unmanned test flights
beginning in 2025. As is the case with nearly every prototype, actual
testing will likely occur later than intended, but even so, the
newly-established partnership between BAE and RAL certainly bodes well
for the future of commercial space travel.
http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2015/11/04/britain-is-developing-hybrid-rocket-engine-that-can-reach-five-times-speed.html
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