Q&A

Is a SpaceX launch cheaper than NASA?

Is a SpaceX launch cheaper than NASA?

SpaceX now handles about two-thirds of NASA’s launches, including many research payloads, with flights as cheap as $62 million, roughly two-thirds the price of a rocket from United Launch Alliance, a competitor.

How much money has SpaceX save NASA?

Elon Musk’s SpaceX saved NASA $500 million — Quartz.

How much money has SpaceX saved NASA?

How much did Jeff Bezos rocket cost?

Aboard Blue Origin’s New Shepard rocket will be Bezos, his brother Mark, and two other occupants – longtime women-in-space advocate Wally Funk, and Oliver Daemen, the winner of a $28 million charity auction for the capsule’s fourth seat. The 11-minute flight cost more than $2.5 million per minute.

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Who owns the SpaceX rocket?

Elon Musk Trust
SpaceX

Headquarters in December 2017; plumes from a flight of a Falcon 9 rocket are visible overhead
Revenue US$2 billion (2018)
Owner Elon Musk Trust (54\% equity; 78\% voting control)
Number of employees Over 9,500 (February 2021)
Website www.spacex.com

How did Elon Musk save NASA?

A SpaceX Falcon Heavy flies a mission for the US military. The rocket billionaire discourse, heady as it is, can distract from the facts. Here’s one: NASA saved at least $548 million, and perhaps more, thanks to just one contract with Elon Musk’s SpaceX.

How much would it cost to launch a rocket from SpaceX?

It’s an extremely ambitious target. Despite costs plummeting thanks to improving reusability, a launch of SpaceX’s much smaller workhorse rocket Falcon 9 currently costs $62 million — more than thirty times Musk’s quoted price of a Starship launch. Does that mean Musk pulled the $2 million figure out of thin air?

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Will ‘flight-proven’ rockets reduce the cost of an ordinary rocket launch?

If this is true, then “flight-proven” rockets could reduce the cost of an ordinary launch to as little as $36 million. That’s even cheaper than the 30\% cost reduction that SpaceX initially promised four years ago.

Is NASA building its own rocket launch system?

NASA has built only two in-house launch systems (Saturn and Space Shuttle) and is building a third (SLS).

Is it safe to launch a used rocket to space?

The government had previously insisted that such “national security” satellites be launched aboard brand new rockets, but SpaceX has successfully re-flown used rockets for other customers 38 times now. It seems that that’s enough to have finally convinced Space Force that this is a safe way to get to orbit — and cheaper, to boot.