Science
Varda hails success of autonomous touchdown tech and celebrates heat data haul
American outfit Varda Space Industries thinks it’s a little closer to operating factories in space after successfully landing its latest test craft.Varda won the USA’s first-ever license to first license fly uncrewed spacecraft that reenter the Earth's atmosphere. The company wants to do this so it can build small craft that include manufacturing facilities that create products it’s only possible to make in microgravity - mostly pharmaceuticals - and figures that the relatively cheap launch services offered by private launch companies will make orbital factories economically viable.Spacecraft are not cheap to build, and the cost rises if they include equipment to slow from orbital speeds before reaching Earth’s atmosphere. Crewed craft can be more expensive still. And humanity just doesn’t have a lot of capacity to schlep stuff home from space.
In March, Varda therefore launched a capsule called the W-6 that it hoped would survive re-entry at hypersonic speeds, and do so using an autonomous navigation system “that uses onboard imagery to identify resident space objects, including stars and low Earth orbit satellites, to determine precise vehicle position.”










