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Rockstar Successfully Demonstrates Firetstar™ NUCLEAR FUSION-ENHANCED PULSED PLASMA PROPULSION DRIVE
The Debrief ^ | APRIL 12, 2024 | CHRISTOPHER PLAIN

Posted on 04/12/2024 6:45:50 AM PDT by Red Badger

RocketStar Inc. has announced the first successful demonstration of their nuclear fusion-enhanced pulsed plasma FireStar™ Drive. The potentially groundbreaking device upgrades the company’s base water-fueled pulsed plasma thruster by injecting particles into the drive’s exhaust plume, resulting in a fusion reaction that dramatically increases the base drive’s power output.

“This is the first productive use of nuclear fusion that doesn’t annihilate humanity,” quipped RocketStar’s CEO Chris Craddock and Chief Technology Officer Wes Fayler in a joint email to The Debrief.

ENHANCING CUTTING-EDGE ELECTRIC PROPULSION TO CREATE FIRESTAR™

Today, all satellites and space vehicles must ride aboard rockets to escape Earth’s gravity. But once in space, these vehicles can employ a growing list of alternative propulsion technologies to navigate in low to zero G environments. Among the most popular are electric propulsion drives that create small amounts of thrust but are significantly more fuel-efficient than conventional rockets.

This type of fuel-to-thrust ratio is particularly important for vehicles that are intended to remain in orbit for long periods of time while also retaining the ability to maneuver when needed. Electric propulsion drives are also ideally suited for missions to the outer reaches of the solar system since they can combine the power collected from the sun with a small amount of propellant to travel vast distances.

RocketStar’s Foundation drive is one such electric propulsion technology that uses plain old water as its core propellant. According to the company, the drive has been tested in space as part of NASA’s Artemis missions.

“Our FireStar™ Foundation Drive was developed for and launched on Artemis 1 in November 2022,” they told The Debrief. “The initial model was delivered to NASA for integration in 2019, with further commercial sales closed thereafter.”

Now, the company says it has created an add-on unit to its Foundation drive that employs a form of “aneutronic” nuclear fusion to dramatically increase performance without adding additional fuel.

FROM NAPKIN TO BORON: THE BIRTH OF A NUCLEAR-FUSION ENHANCED DRIVE

In a previous statement, Craddock described how a single conversation with Fayler, then the founder of Miles Aerospace, led to the creation and eventual successful test of a fusion-enhance electric propulsion drive.

“On a napkin at a conference in Florida, I sketched this idea out and described it to Wes Faler, the founder of Miles Space,” Craddock explained. “He was quite clever in developing both the base thruster and the fusion enhancement.”

That conversation resulted in RocketStar acquiring Miles Space and making Fayler their CTO. After that, the concept moved from a napkin to the labs of the technology innovation arm of the Department of the Air Force and the US Space Force (USSF), called AFWERX. There, the team was able to use the existing drive’s exhaust to create a nuclear fusion reaction by injecting Boron directly into the exhaust plume. Much like an afterburner injects raw fuel directly into the exhaust of a jet engine to offer short bursts of speed, the injection of Boron resulted in a dramatic increase in efficiency.

“We create protons as a by-product of our Foundation thruster that are moving fast enough to induce nuclear fusion with Boron,” the company told The Debrief. “That type of fusion creates a high-energy carbon that immediately decays into three useful alpha particles, thereby breaking up the cloud of positive charge that exists in the exhaust of all-electric thrusters.”

This means that the fusion reaction does not increase the thrust by forcing blasts of fusion radiation out the back of the thruster. Instead, the alpha particles generated simply improve the existing thruster by reducing the “space charge effect” thereby increasing the operating efficiency of the Foundation drive.

“It’s all indirect, using a very specific type of fusion to sweep away garbage,” RocketStar executives told The Debrief.

Those improved propulsion results were later confirmed in Phase 2 of the system’s development at Georgia Tech’s High Power Electric Propulsion Laboratory (HPEPL) in Atlanta, Georgia. There, the drive not only created the telltale ionizing radiation of the fusion reaction but also improved the base unit’s thrust by 50%.

“RocketStar has not just incrementally improved a propulsion system, but has taken a leap forward by applying a novel concept, creating a fusion-fission reaction in the exhaust,” said Adam Hecht, Professor of Nuclear Engineering at the University of New Mexico, in the company’s statement. “This is an exciting time in technology development, and I am looking forward to their future innovations.”

UPCOMING FLIGHTS WILL TEST ROCKETSTAR’S DRIVES IN SPACE

In their email to The Debrief, Craddock and Fayler said that although their testing took place under AFWERX, the AFRL “did not have any role” in the drive’s development. Instead, they said, the lab “monitored the development with the idea of adoption once it’s passed prototype phase.”

Up next, the company says they have a handful of test flights on the calendar. This includes two flights scheduled for this summer and fall, followed by the maiden run of the new FireStar™ drive that should take place early next year.

Credit: NASA:JPL-Caltech:MSSS See Also

“FireStar™ Foundation Drive will be integrated into a D-Orbit hosted payload for launch on SpaceX Transporter 11 & 12 in July and October this year,” company executives told The Debrief.

D-orbit echoed that enthusiasm, with Matteo Lorenzoni, Head of Sales at D-Orbit, noting that “we just integrated the thruster onto the ION Satellite Carrier, and look forward to witnessing its performance in orbit.”

After that, Craddock and Fayler told The Debrief that the FireStar™ Fusion Drive is scheduled to ride with Rogue Space Systems “in February 2025” with the express goal of capturing in-space measurements related to fuel and economy, “along with an array of performance metrics, both with and without fusion.”

“We are very excited to test FireStar for RocketStar,” said Brent Abbott, CRO at Rogue Space Systems, in the same statement, confirming the February 2025 launch aboard the company’s Barry-2 spacecraft. “We look forward to considering it for future Rogue missions.”

When The Debrief asked RocketStar what the most important takeaway from their successful demonstration of a fusion-enhanced pulsed plasma electric propulsion drive is, the company reiterated that this type of breakthrough was not incremental but a leap forward. They also believe that the first successful fusion-fission reaction in the exhaust plume of an electric drive could one day lead to dramatically reduced travel times within the solar system.

“A new way to move in space has been proven,” Craddock and Fayler explained. “Will it cut transit time to Mars and beyond? One of our visions as a company is to dramatically evolve our propulsion technology over time, ultimately resulting in transit times to Mars measured in days instead of weeks.”


TOPICS: Astronomy; Military/Veterans; Science; Travel; UFO's
KEYWORDS: boron; firestar; fission; fusion; georgiatech; milesaerospace; nasa; rockstar; spaceforce; usaf
To: AdmSmith; AnonymousConservative; Arthur Wildfire! March; Berosus; Bockscar; BraveMan; cardinal4; ...

2 posted on 04/12/2024 10:30:23 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (I got skills.)
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To: SunkenCiv

Bump!


3 posted on 04/12/2024 5:54:47 PM PDT by golux
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To: SunkenCiv

“We create protons as a by-product of our Foundation thruster that are moving fast enough to induce nuclear fusion with Boron,”

I call BS.

L


4 posted on 04/12/2024 5:57:33 PM PDT by Lurker ( Peaceful coexistence with the Left is not possible. Stop pretending that it is.)
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To: Lurker

I think the press release may be a bit too enthusiastic and maybe dumbed down, but turns out that is a thing, I had no idea.

https://search.brave.com/search?q=boron+fusion


5 posted on 04/12/2024 7:31:22 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Putin should skip ahead to where he kills himself in the bunker.)
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To: SunkenCiv

Okay then. I wonder exactly how much energy is required to start the fusion of boron.

L


6 posted on 04/12/2024 7:33:39 PM PDT by Lurker ( Peaceful coexistence with the Left is not possible. Stop pretending that it is.)
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To: Lurker

I’ll only buy their line once it has been demo’d in space.


7 posted on 04/12/2024 7:36:42 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Putin should skip ahead to where he kills himself in the bunker.)
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To: SunkenCiv

Is this at Costco yet?


8 posted on 04/13/2024 11:39:57 AM PDT by NoLibZone (We have the nation we deserve The bad guys are willing to protest & riot while, we post in all caps)
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To: SunkenCiv

Pretty sure I saw one of these in the same aisle as the power washers at Harbor Freight.

It was very expensive. No worries, they have really good sales, though you have to remember it might be tough to get replacement parts since everything at Harbor Freight is made in China.

You’d have to pay to have it delivered, and it won’t be cheap. Probably costs more to deliver than their biggest safe, and they have some big ones.


9 posted on 04/13/2024 8:55:01 PM PDT by zipper (In their heart of hearts, all Democrats are communists)
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To: SunkenCiv

bttt


10 posted on 04/13/2024 9:04:05 PM PDT by linMcHlp
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To: zipper

I call the place ‘china freight’ and my then 9 year old asked me why in spite of the sign mentioning a harbor. I challenged her to find a product there that was not made in china. She did find a bottle of car polish (nu finish perhaps?) that was made in USA.


11 posted on 04/15/2024 7:25:36 PM PDT by posterchild
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To: posterchild

haha — yeah I figure it’s probably okay to buy things there that have few or no moving parts, that you can inspect beforehand, especially if you keep an eye on their sales. The rest of their more complex products (like generators) will likely be junk after they break, from lack of support.


12 posted on 04/15/2024 10:06:49 PM PDT by zipper (In their heart of hearts, all Democrats are communists)
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To: zipper

Probably the most complicated thing i bought there was an angle grinder or a manual riveter - usually it is stuff like a soft mallet or disposables like cutting wheels.


13 posted on 04/16/2024 2:30:35 PM PDT by posterchild
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To: SunkenCiv; Red Badger

I’ve been following aneutronic fusion for a while now.

Adding a proton to Boron eleven can get the described result of three energetic alpha particles, but getting the proton up to the required speed has been a challenge.

Boron comes in two flavors, Boron eleven and Boron ten. Boron ten has a hunger for a loose neutron and makes good shielding material, capturing the neutron and promoting itself into Boron eleven.

Boron eleven then has a hunger for a loose proton, capturing such if possible and “fusing” into carbon as described, which then gloriously disintegrates into three, (count them), alpha particles (Helium nuclei), which have tremendous momentum controllable by magnetic fields.

One problem with its being “aneutronic” however, is that a portion of the reactions, I think less than one percent, can actually spill out a neutron, which then of course gets a little messy.

There is evidence that the next step up the alpha particle assembly ladder, an isotope of nitrogen, may be able to be a bit more stable as it disintegrates into FOUR alpha particles with the addition of a single proton.

The Nitrogen isotope is somewhat rare, but Nitrogen is not.

Fusion, especially aneutronic fusion, could be very useful. Let me know how your research turns out.


14 posted on 04/23/2024 11:36:21 AM PDT by NicknamedBob (If you can't do something well, you won't do anything good.)
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To: NicknamedBob

Sounds like a ‘combo’ of Boron, Helium and Nitrogen is needed..................


15 posted on 04/23/2024 11:42:56 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: Red Badger

Helium adds nothing.

Shooting a Boron eleven nucleus with a proton takes a steady eye. Putting Nitrogen up as a target might get interesting results, but the whole concept of aneutronic fusion is to break up individual atoms into what can be perceived as their constituent alpha particles.


16 posted on 04/23/2024 11:52:03 AM PDT by NicknamedBob (If you can't do something well, you won't do anything good.)
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To: NicknamedBob

Oops!, I meant Hydrogen.

Create a hydrogen plasma and you have a bunch of protons floating around, and at least one of them will get kidnapped by the Boron................


17 posted on 04/23/2024 11:56:31 AM PDT by Red Badger (Homeless veterans camp in the streets while illegals are put up in 5 Star hotels....................)
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To: Red Badger

That’s called electrostatic fusion, and it’s what Philo Farnsworth was doing in the late sixties, and what Dr. Robert Forward spent his last days pursuing.

It’s still interesting though, and many high school kids have been doing fusion in their parent’s garage.

The most expensive part is the vacuum chamber, but I think we can salvage the concept as shown in the original post here.

Just set up the electrostatic fusion chamber as a maneuvering thruster, because outer space will provide the vacuum.


18 posted on 04/23/2024 12:28:03 PM PDT by NicknamedBob (If you can't do something well, you won't do anything good.)
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