
A reusable launch vehicle have parts that can be recovered and reflown, while carrying
payloads from the surface to
outer space.
Rocket stages are the most common
launch vehicle parts aimed for reuse. Smaller parts such as
rocket engines and
boosters can also be reused, though
reusable spacecraft
A reusable spacecraft is a class of spacecraft that have been designed with repeated launch, orbit, deorbit and atmospheric reentry in mind. This contrasts with conventional spacecraft which are designed to be expended (thrown away, allowed to bur ...
may be launched on top of an expendable launch vehicle. Reusable launch vehicles do not need to make these parts for each launch, therefore reducing its
launch cost significantly. However, these benefits are diminished by the cost of recovery and refurbishment.
Reusable launch vehicles may contain additional
avionics and
propellant
A propellant (or propellent) is a mass that is expelled or expanded in such a way as to create a thrust or other motive force in accordance with Newton's third law of motion, and "propel" a vehicle, projectile, or fluid payload. In vehicles, the e ...
, making them heavier than their expendable counterparts. Reused parts may need to
enter the atmosphere and navigate through it, so they are often equipped with
heat shields,
grid fins, and other
flight control surfaces. By modifying their shape,
spaceplanes can leverage
aviation
Aviation includes the activities surrounding mechanical flight and the aircraft industry. ''Aircraft'' includes fixed-wing and rotary-wing types, morphable wings, wing-less lifting bodies, as well as lighter-than-air craft such as hot ...
mechanics to aid in its recovery, such as
gliding or
lift. In the atmosphere,
parachutes or
retrorockets may also be needed to slow down it further. Reusable parts may also need specialized recovery facilities such as
runways or
autonomous spaceport drone ships. Some concepts rely on ground infrastructures such as
mass drivers
A mass driver or electromagnetic catapult is a proposed method of non-rocket spacelaunch which would use a linear motor to accelerate and catapult payloads up to high speeds. Existing and contemplated mass drivers use coils of wire energized by ...
to accelerate the launch vehicle beforehand.
Since at least in the early 20th century,
single-stage-to-orbit
A single-stage-to-orbit (SSTO) vehicle reaches orbit from the surface of a body using only propellants and fluids and without expending tanks, engines, or other major hardware. The term usually, but not exclusively, refers to reusable vehicles ...
reusable launch vehicles have existed in
science fiction
Science fiction (sometimes shortened to Sci-Fi or SF) is a genre of speculative fiction which typically deals with imagination, imaginative and futuristic concepts such as advanced science and technology, space exploration, time travel, Paral ...
. In the 1960s and 1970s, the first reusable launch vehicles were manufactured, named the
Space Shuttle and
Energia
Energia or Energiya may refer to:
* Energia (corporation), or S. P. Korolev Rocket and Space Corporation Energia, a Russian design bureau and manufacturer
** Energia (rocket), a Soviet rocket designed by the company
*Energia (company), a company th ...
. However, in the 1990s, due to both programs' failure to meet expectations, reusable launch vehicle concepts were reduced to prototype testing. The rise of
private spaceflight companies in the 2000s and 2010s lead to a resurgence of their development, such as in
SpaceShipOne,
New Shepard,
Electron,
Falcon 9 and
Falcon Heavy. Many launch vehicles are now expected to debut with reusability in the 2020s, such as
Starship
A starship, starcraft, or interstellar spacecraft is a theoretical spacecraft designed for interstellar travel, traveling between planetary systems.
The term is mostly found in science fiction. Reference to a "star-ship" appears as early as 188 ...
,
New Glenn
New Glenn is a heavy-lift orbital launch vehicle in development by Blue Origin. Named after NASA astronaut John Glenn, design work on the vehicle began in 2012. Illustrations of the vehicle, and the high-level specifications, were initially ...
,
Amur,
Ariane Next,
Long March rockets
The Long March rockets are a family of expendable launch system rockets operated by the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation.
The rockets are named after the Chinese Red Army's 1934–35 Long March military retreat during the Ch ...
, and the Dawn Mk-II Aurora.
Configurations
Reusable launch systems may be either fully- or partially-reusable.
Fully-reusable launch vehicle
, fully-reusable
orbital
Orbital may refer to:
Sciences Chemistry and physics
* Atomic orbital
* Molecular orbital
* Hybrid orbital Astronomy and space flight
* Orbit
** Earth orbit
Medicine and physiology
* Orbit (anatomy), also known as the ''orbital bone''
* Orbito ...
systems have yet to be built and made operational. Fully-reusable launch vehicles could theoretically be
single-stage-to-orbit
A single-stage-to-orbit (SSTO) vehicle reaches orbit from the surface of a body using only propellants and fluids and without expending tanks, engines, or other major hardware. The term usually, but not exclusively, refers to reusable vehicles ...
(SSTO) vehicles, as well as
multi-stage-to orbit systems.
Three companies are currently in development to achieve fully-reusable launch vehicles as of July 2021. Each of them is working on a
two-stage-to-orbit system.
SpaceX
Space Exploration Technologies Corp. (SpaceX) is an American spacecraft manufacturer, launcher, and a satellite communications corporation headquartered in Hawthorne, California. It was founded in 2002 by Elon Musk with the stated goal of ...
, with their
SpaceX Starship, has been in development since 2016 and is aiming to make an initial test flight of a part of the system capabilities as early as 2022.
Relativity Space, with their
Terran R
Terran R is a medium-lift two-stage, fully reusable launch vehicle under development by Relativity Space. The vehicle is primarily constructed with 3D printing technologies, much like its predecessor, the small-lift Terran 1.
Description
Terra ...
beginning development by 2021, is aiming to make an initial orbital launch test by 2024.
Blue Origin, with
Project Jarvis, began development work by early 2021, but has announced no date for testing, nor even been public with their plans.
Earlier plans to run tests of enhanced reusability on the second stage of the SpaceX
Falcon 9 were set aside in 2018.
Partially-reusable launch systems
Partial reusable launch systems, in the form of multiple stage to orbit systems have been so far the only reusable configurations in use.
Liftoff stages
Existing reusable launch systems use rocket-propelled vertical
liftoff.
Other than that a range of
non-rocket liftoff systems have been proposed and explored over time as reusable systems for liftoff, from balloons to
space elevators. Existing examples are systems which employ winged horizontal jet-engine powered liftoff. Such aircraft can
air launch expendable rockets and can because of that be considered partially reusable systems if the aircraft is thought of as the first stage of the launch vehicle. An example of this configuration is the
Orbital Sciences Pegasus. For suborbital flight the
SpaceShipTwo uses for liftoff a carrier plane, its
mothership the
Scaled Composites White Knight Two.
Orbital insertion stages
So far, launch systems achieve
orbital insertion with
multistaged rockets, particularly with the second and third stages. Only the
Space Shuttle has achieved a partial reuse of the orbital insertion stage, by using the engines of
its orbiter.
Reusable orbiter
Launch systems can be combined with reusable orbiters. The
Space Shuttle orbiter,
SpaceShipTwo, Dawn Mk-II Aurora, and the under-development Indian
RLV-TD
RLV-TD is India's first uncrewed flying testbed developed for the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO)'s Reusable Launch Vehicle Technology Demonstration Programme. It is a scaled down prototype of an eventual two-stage-to-orbit (TSTO) reus ...
are examples for a reusable space vehicle (a
spaceplane) as well as a part of its launch system.
More contemporarily the
Falcon 9 launch system has carried reusable vehicles such as the
Dragon 2 and
X-37, transporting two reusable vehicles at the same time.
Contemporary reusable orbital vehicles include the X-37, the
Dream Chaser, the Dragon 2, the Indian RLV-TD and the upcoming European
Space Rider (successor to the
IXV
The Intermediate eXperimental Vehicle (IXV) is a European Space Agency (ESA) experimental suborbital re-entry vehicle. It was developed to serve as a prototype lifting body orbital return vehicle to validate the ESA's work in the field of reus ...
).
As with launch vehicles, all pure spacecraft during the early decades of human capacity to achieve spaceflight were designed to be single-use items. This was true both for
satellite
A satellite or artificial satellite is an object intentionally placed into orbit in outer space. Except for passive satellites, most satellites have an electricity generation system for equipment on board, such as solar panels or radioiso ...
s and
space probes intended to be left in space for a long time, as well as any object designed to return to Earth such as
human-carrying space capsules or the sample return canisters of space matter collection missions like
Stardust
Stardust may refer to:
* A type of cosmic dust, composed of particles in space
Entertainment Songs
* “Stardust” (1927 song), by Hoagy Carmichael
* “Stardust” (David Essex song), 1974
* “Stardust” (Lena Meyer-Landrut song), 2012
* ...
(1999–2006)
or
Hayabusa (2005–2010).
Exceptions to the general rule for space vehicles were the US
Gemini SC-2
Gemini SC-2 (Spacecraft No. 2) was the second NASA Project Gemini full-up reentry capsule built. This McDonnell Gemini capsule was the first space capsule to be reused, flying twice in suborbital flights. SC-2 flew on Gemini 2 and OPS 0855 flights ...
, the
Soviet Union
The Soviet Union,. officially the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. (USSR),. was a List of former transcontinental countries#Since 1700, transcontinental country that spanned much of Eurasia from 1922 to 1991. A flagship communist state, ...
spacecraft
Vozvraschaemyi Apparat (VA), the US
Space Shuttle orbiter (mid-1970s-2011, with 135 flights between 1981 and 2011) and the Soviet
Buran (1980-1988, with just one uncrewed test flight in 1988). Both of these spaceships were also an integral part of the launch system (providing launch acceleration) as well as operating as medium-duration spaceships in
space
Space is the boundless three-dimensional extent in which objects and events have relative position and direction. In classical physics, physical space is often conceived in three linear dimensions, although modern physicists usually con ...
. This began to change in the mid-2010s.
In the 2010s, the
space transport cargo capsule from one of the suppliers resupplying the
International Space Station
The International Space Station (ISS) is the largest Modular design, modular space station currently in low Earth orbit. It is a multinational collaborative project involving five participating space agencies: NASA (United States), Roscosmos ( ...
was designed for reuse, and after 2017,
NASA began to allow the reuse of the SpaceX
Dragon cargo spacecraft on these NASA-contracted transport routes. This was the beginning of design and operation of a reusable space vehicle.
Since then also the
Boeing Starliner capsules reduce their fall speed with parachutes and deploy an airbag shortly before touchdown on the ground, in order to retrieve and reuse the vehicle.
, SpaceX is currently building and testing the
Starship
A starship, starcraft, or interstellar spacecraft is a theoretical spacecraft designed for interstellar travel, traveling between planetary systems.
The term is mostly found in science fiction. Reference to a "star-ship" appears as early as 188 ...
spaceship to be capable of surviving multiple
hypersonic reentries through the atmosphere so that they become truly reusable long-duration spaceships; no Starship operational flights have yet occurred.
Entry systems
Heat shield
With possible inflatable
heat shields, as developed by the US (Low Earth Orbit Flight Test Inflatable Decelerator - LOFTID)
and China, single-use rockets like the
Space Launch System are considered to be retrofitted with such heat shields to salvage the expensive engines, possibly reducing the costs of launches significantly.
Retrograde thrust
Reusable launch system stages such as the
Falcon 9 employ retrograde burns for deorbit, re-entry, and landing.
Landing systems
Reusable systems can come in
single or multiple
(
two or
three) stages to orbit configurations. For some or all stages the following landing system types can be employed.
Types
Braking
These are landing systems that employ parachutes and bolstered hard landings, like in a
splashdown at sea or a touchdown at land.
Though such systems have been in use since the beginning of
astronautics to recover space vehicles, particularly crewed
space capsules, only later have the vehicles been reused.
E.g.:
*
Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Boosters
The Space Shuttle Solid Rocket Booster (SRB) was the first solid-propellant rocket to be used for primary propulsion on a vehicle used for human spaceflight. A pair of these provided 85% of the Space Shuttle's thrust at liftoff and for the first ...
*Space Shuttle growth study
recoverable liquid boosters
Horizontal (winged)
Single or main stages, as well as
fly-back boosters can employ a horizontal landing system.
Examples are:
*
Space Shuttle orbiter - as part of the main stage
*
Venturestar - a project of
NASA
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA ) is an independent agency of the US federal government responsible for the civil space program, aeronautics research, and space research.
NASA was established in 1958, succeedi ...
*
Space Shuttle's studied fly-back booster
*
Energia II ("Uragan") - an alternative
Buran launch system concept
*
OK-GLI - another
Buran spacecraft version
*
Liquid Fly-back Booster - a German concept
*
Baikal - a former Russian project
*
Reusable Booster System - a U.S. research project
*
SpaceShipTwo - a
spaceplane for
space tourism made by
Virgin Galactic
*
SpaceShipThree - a
spaceplane under development for
space tourism made by
Virgin Galactic
*Dawn Mk-II Aurora - a
spaceplane under development by
Dawn Aerospace
*
XS-1 - another U.S. research project
*
RLV-TD
RLV-TD is India's first uncrewed flying testbed developed for the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO)'s Reusable Launch Vehicle Technology Demonstration Programme. It is a scaled down prototype of an eventual two-stage-to-orbit (TSTO) reus ...
- an ongoing Indian project
*
Reaction Engines Skylon Skylon may refer to:
* Skylon (Festival of Britain), a landmark structure of the 1951 Festival of Britain
* Skylon (spacecraft), a proposed orbital spaceplane
* Skylon Tower, an observation tower in Niagara Falls, Ontario
* ''Skylon'' (album), a 20 ...
SSTO
A single-stage-to-orbit (SSTO) vehicle reaches orbit from the surface of a body using only propellants and fluids and without expending tanks, engines, or other major hardware. The term usually, but not exclusively, refers to reusable vehicles ...
A variant is an in-air-capture tow back system, advocated by a company called EMBENTION with its FALCon project.
Vehicles that land horizontally on a runway require wings and undercarriage. These typically consume about 9-12% of the landing vehicle mass, which either reduces the payload or increases the size of the vehicle. Concepts such as
lifting bodies
A lifting body is a fixed-wing aircraft or spacecraft configuration in which the body itself produces lift. In contrast to a flying wing, which is a wing with minimal or no conventional fuselage, a lifting body can be thought of as a fuselage ...
offer some reduction in wing mass, as does the
delta wing shape of the
Space Shuttle.
Vertical (retrograde)
Systems like the
McDonnell Douglas DC-X (Delta Clipper) and those by
SpaceX
Space Exploration Technologies Corp. (SpaceX) is an American spacecraft manufacturer, launcher, and a satellite communications corporation headquartered in Hawthorne, California. It was founded in 2002 by Elon Musk with the stated goal of ...
are examples of a retrograde system.
The boosters of
Falcon 9 and
Falcon Heavy land using one of their nine engines. The
Falcon 9 rocket is the first orbital rocket to vertically land its first stage on the ground. Both stages of
Starship
A starship, starcraft, or interstellar spacecraft is a theoretical spacecraft designed for interstellar travel, traveling between planetary systems.
The term is mostly found in science fiction. Reference to a "star-ship" appears as early as 188 ...
are planned to land vertically.
Retrograde landing typically requires about 10% of the total first stage propellant, reducing the payload that can be carried due to the
rocket equation.
Landing using aerostatic force
There is also the concept of a launch vehicle with an inflatable, reusable first stage. The shape of this structure will be supported by excess internal pressure (using light gases). It is assumed that the bulk density of the first stage (without propellant) is less than the bulk density of air. Upon returning from flight, such a first stage remains floating in the air (without touching the surface of the Earth). This will ensure that the first stage is retained for reuse. Increasing the size of the first stage increases aerodynamic losses. This results in a slight decrease in payload. This reduction in payload is compensated for by the reuse of the first stage.
Constraints
Extra weight
Reusable stages weigh more than equivalent
expendable stages. This is unavoidable due to the supplementary systems, landing gear and/or surplus propellant needed to land a stage. The actual mass penalty depends on the vehicle and the return mode chosen.
Refurbishment
After the launcher lands, it may need to be refurbished to prepare it for its next flight. This process may be lengthy and expensive. The launcher may not be able to be recertified as human-rated after refurbishment, although SpaceX has flown reused Falcon 9 boosters for human missions. There is eventually a limit on how many times a launcher can be refurbished before it has to be retired, but how often a spacecraft can be reused differs significantly between the various launch system designs.
History
With the development of
rocket propulsion in the first half of the twentieth century,
space travel became a technical possibility.
Early ideas of a single-stage reusable
spaceplane proved unrealistic and although even the first practical rocket vehicles (
V-2) could reach the fringes of space, reusable technology was too heavy. In addition many early rockets were developed to deliver weapons, making reuse impossible by design. The problem of mass efficiency was overcome by using multiple expendable stages in a vertical-launch
multistage rocket. USAF and NACA had been studying orbital reusable spaceplanes since 1958, e.g.
Dyna-Soar, but the first reusable stages did not fly until the advent of the US
Space Shuttle in 1981.
20th century

Perhaps the first reusable launch vehicles were the ones conceptualized and studied by
Wernher von Braun from 1948 until 1956. The
Von Braun Ferry Rocket {{unreferenced, date=October 2015
Von Braun Ferry Rocket was a concept design for a shuttle spacecraft that was developed by Wernher von Braun in a seminal series of early-1950s ''Collier's'' magazine articles, "Man Will Conquer Space Soon!" by Wern ...
underwent two revisions: once in 1952 and again in 1956. They would have landed using parachutes.
The
General Dynamics Nexus
The NEXUS reusable rocket was a concept design created in the 1960s by a group at General Dynamics led by Krafft Arnold Ehricke. It was intended as the next leap beyond the Saturn V, carrying up to eight times more payload. Several versions were ...
was proposed in the 1960s as a fully reusable successor to the Saturn V rocket, having the capacity of transporting up to to orbit. See also
Sea Dragon
Sea Dragon or seadragon may refer to:
Fish
* Leafy seadragon (''Phycodurus eques'')
* '' Phyllopteryx'' genus
** Common seadragon or weedy seadragon (''Phyllopteryx taeniolatus'')
** Ruby seadragon (''Phyllopteryx dewysea'')
Military
* Operat ...
, and
Douglas SASSTO.
The
BAC Mustard was studied starting in 1964. It would have comprised three identical spaceplanes strapped together and arranged in two stages. During ascent the two outer spaceplanes, which formed the first stage, would detach and glide back individually to earth. It was canceled after the last study of the design in 1967 due to a lack of funds for development.
NASA started the
Space Shuttle design process in 1968, with the vision of creating a fully reusable
spaceplane using a crewed
fly-back booster. This concept proved expensive and complex, therefore the design was scaled back to reusable
solid rocket
A solid-propellant rocket or solid rocket is a rocket with a rocket engine that uses solid propellants
Rocket propellant is the reaction mass of a rocket. This reaction mass is ejected at the highest achievable velocity from a rocket engine ...
boosters and an expendable
external tank.
[NASA-CR-195281, "Utilization of the external tanks of the space transportation system"]
/ref> Space Shuttle ''Columbia
Columbia may refer to:
* Columbia (personification), the historical female national personification of the United States, and a poetic name for America
Places North America Natural features
* Columbia Plateau, a geologic and geographic region in ...
'' launched and landed 27 times and was lost with all crew on the 28th landing attempt; '' Challenger''
launched and landed 9 times and was lost with all crew on the 10th launch attempt; '' Discovery'' launched and landed 39 times; '' Atlantis'' launched and landed 33 times.
In 1986 President Ronald Reagan
Ronald Wilson Reagan ( ; February 6, 1911June 5, 2004) was an American politician, actor, and union leader who served as the 40th president of the United States from 1981 to 1989. He also served as the 33rd governor of California from 1967 ...
called for an air-breathing scramjet National Aerospace Plane (NASP)/ X-30. The project failed due to technical issues and was canceled in 1993.
In the late 1980s a fully reusable version of the Energia
Energia or Energiya may refer to:
* Energia (corporation), or S. P. Korolev Rocket and Space Corporation Energia, a Russian design bureau and manufacturer
** Energia (rocket), a Soviet rocket designed by the company
*Energia (company), a company th ...
rocket, the Energia II, was proposed. Its boosters and core would have had the capability of landing separately on a runway.
In the 1990s the McDonnell Douglas Delta Clipper VTOL SSTO proposal progressed to the testing phase. The DC-X prototype demonstrated rapid turnaround time and automatic computer control.
In mid-1990s, British research evolved an earlier HOTOL design into the far more promising Skylon Skylon may refer to:
* Skylon (Festival of Britain), a landmark structure of the 1951 Festival of Britain
* Skylon (spacecraft), a proposed orbital spaceplane
* Skylon Tower, an observation tower in Niagara Falls, Ontario
* ''Skylon'' (album), a 20 ...
design, which remains in development.
From the late 1990s to the 2000s, the European Space Agency studied the recovery of the Ariane 5 solid rocket
A solid-propellant rocket or solid rocket is a rocket with a rocket engine that uses solid propellants
Rocket propellant is the reaction mass of a rocket. This reaction mass is ejected at the highest achievable velocity from a rocket engine ...
boosters. The last recovery attempt took place in 2009.
The commercial ventures, Rocketplane Kistler and Rotary Rocket
Rotary Rocket Company was an aerospace company in the late 1990s. Its founders were among the first to recognize that the end of the Cold War represented a significant shift away from the militarization of space, to a new civilian-led, commercia ...
, attempted to build reusable privately developed rockets before going bankrupt.
NASA proposed reusable concepts to replace the Shuttle technology, to be demonstrated under the X-33 and X-34 programs, which were both cancelled in the early 2000s due to rising costs and technical issues.
21st century
The Ansari X Prize contest was intended to develop private suborbital reusable vehicles. Many private companies competed, with the winner, Scaled Composites, reaching the Kármán line
The Kármán line (or von Kármán line ) is an attempt to define a boundary between Earth's atmosphere and outer space, and offers a specific definition set by the Fédération aéronautique internationale (FAI), an international record-keeping ...
twice in a two-week period with their reusable SpaceShipOne.
In 2012, SpaceX
Space Exploration Technologies Corp. (SpaceX) is an American spacecraft manufacturer, launcher, and a satellite communications corporation headquartered in Hawthorne, California. It was founded in 2002 by Elon Musk with the stated goal of ...
started a flight test program with experimental vehicles. These subsequently led to the development of the Falcon 9 reusable rocket launcher.
On 23 November 2015 the New Shepard rocket became the first Vertical Take-off, Vertical Landing (VTVL) sub-orbital rocket to reach space by passing the Kármán line
The Kármán line (or von Kármán line ) is an attempt to define a boundary between Earth's atmosphere and outer space, and offers a specific definition set by the Fédération aéronautique internationale (FAI), an international record-keeping ...
(), reaching before returning for a propulsive landing.
SpaceX achieved the first vertical soft landing of a reusable orbital rocket stage on December 21, 2015, after delivering 11 Orbcomm OG-2
Orbcomm is a family of low Earth orbit communications satellites, operated by the United States satellite communications company Orbcomm. , 51 such satellites have orbited Earth, with 50 still continuing to do so.
Satellite types Orbcomm-CD ...
commercial satellites into low Earth orbit.
The first reuse of a Falcon 9 first stage occurred on 30 March 2017. SpaceX now routinely recovers and reuses their first stages, as well as reusing fairings.
In 2019 Rocket Lab announced plans to recover and reuse the first stage of their Electron launch vehicle, intending to use parachute
A parachute is a device used to slow the motion of an object through an atmosphere by creating drag or, in a ram-air parachute, aerodynamic lift. A major application is to support people, for recreation or as a safety device for aviators, who ...
s and mid-air retrieval. On 20 November 2020, Rocket Lab successfully returned an Electron first stage from an orbital launch, the stage softly splashing down in the Pacific Ocean.
China is researching the reusability of the Long March 8
Long March 8 () is an orbital launch vehicle developed by the China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology to launch up to 5000 kg to a 700 km altitude Sun-synchronous orbit (SSO). The rocket is based on the Long March 7
, stages ...
system.
, the only operational reusable orbital-class launch systems are the Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy, the latter of which is based upon the Falcon 9. SpaceX is also developing the fully-reusable Starship
A starship, starcraft, or interstellar spacecraft is a theoretical spacecraft designed for interstellar travel, traveling between planetary systems.
The term is mostly found in science fiction. Reference to a "star-ship" appears as early as 188 ...
launch system,[
Archived a]
Ghostarchive
and th
Wayback Machine
and Blue Origin is developing its own New Glenn
New Glenn is a heavy-lift orbital launch vehicle in development by Blue Origin. Named after NASA astronaut John Glenn, design work on the vehicle began in 2012. Illustrations of the vehicle, and the high-level specifications, were initially ...
partially-reusable orbital rocket, as it is intending to recover and reuse only the first stage.
5 October 2020, Roscosmos signed a development contract for Amur a new launcher with a reusable first stage.
In December 2020, ESA signed contracts to start developing THEMIS, a prototype reusable first stage launcher.
List of reusable launch systems
See also
* Reusable spacecraft
A reusable spacecraft is a class of spacecraft that have been designed with repeated launch, orbit, deorbit and atmospheric reentry in mind. This contrasts with conventional spacecraft which are designed to be expended (thrown away, allowed to bur ...
* SpaceX reusable launch system development program
* List of private spaceflight companies
* Takeoff and landing
Mars Descent Vehicle
Mars Ascent Vehicle
*Lunar Lander
A lunar lander or Moon lander is a spacecraft designed to land on the surface of the Moon. As of 2021, the Apollo Lunar Module is the only lunar lander to have ever been used in human spaceflight, completing six lunar landings from 1969 to 19 ...
References
Bibliography
* Heribert Kuczera, et al.: ''Reusable space transportation systems.'' Springer, Berlin 2011, .
External links
Illustration of a Space Shuttle at takeoff and Orbiter
(Visual Dictionary - QAInternational)
* Lunar Lander Module
{{Authority control
Spacecraft propulsion
Reusable spaceflight technology
Space launch vehicles
Space access
Rocket propulsion