ULA's last six Atlas Vs can't launch anything besides Boeing's Starliner - Ars Technica
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The final flight of United Launch Alliance’s Atlas V rocket is still several years off, but an important era for the once-dominant launch company came to a close last week.
The final flight of an Atlas V for the Amazon Leo broadband constellation lifted off from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida at 12:30 am EDT (04:30 UTC) last Thursday, sending 29 satellites to orbit to move the network closer to providing initial services.
All 29 spacecraft deployed from the Atlas V rocket less than an hour after launch. They will use onboard propulsion to raise their orbits from an altitude of approximately 289 miles (465 kilometers) to their final operating positions at 392 miles (630 kilometers) above the Earth.
Thursday’s launch marked the ninth Atlas V flight for Amazon Leo and the fourth Atlas V launch in less than three months, hitting a cadence the rocket has rarely seen in nearly a quarter-century of service. The surge of launches comes as the Atlas V nears the end of its near-flawless career. Thursday’s launch was the 110th flight of an Atlas V rocket since its debut in 2002.
A long goodbye
There are six more Atlas Vs in ULA’s inventory to launch Boeing’s Starliner crew capsules to the International Space Station (ISS) under contract to NASA. But it is not certain today that Boeing will use all six of those Atlas Vs. Last year, NASA reduced the number of guaranteed missions in Boeing’s commercial crew contract from six to four after chronic delays in the program. The next Starliner flight will haul cargo to the ISS, expending one of the remaining Atlas Vs.
So what happens to the Atlas Vs left in ULA’s inventory if Boeing doesn’t need to use them all? One idea would be to repurpose the rockets for other missions, perhaps to add launch capacity for the Amazon Leo network. But there’s a catch.
The Starliner spacecraft flies in an exposed configuration during launch, meaning the launch last week was the last time an Atlas V will fly with a payload fairing. Even if Boeing gave up some of the Atlas Vs under its contractual control, ULA would not be able to easily retrofit any of the leftover Atlas Vs for other missions.
A ULA spokesperson confirmed to Ars that the payload fairing now in production for the company’s newer Vulcan rocket—the replacement for the Atlas V—is “not interchangeable” with the out-of-production Atlas fairing. The Atlas V rockets earmarked for Starliner missions will fly with dual-engine upper stages, a configuration optimized for low-Earth orbit missions, not for high-energy orbits or deep space missions.
Additionally, Thursday morning’s mission was the last to use the Atlas V’s most powerful configuration with five strap-on solid rocket boosters. The Atlas V was designed to fly with anywhere from zero to five strap-on boosters to augment the thrust from the rocket’s Russian-built RD-180 main engine. ULA has enough Atlas V boosters in storage to affix two strap-on motors to each of the six Starliner flights in its backlog. This limits the overall lift capability for the remaining Atlas Vs.
ULA’s next launch will be the return to flight of its newer Vulcan rocket, which has been grounded since February due to problems with its own solid-fueled boosters, similar but distinct from the booster design used on the Atlas V. The recent explosion of Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket on its launch pad in Florida also clouds ULA’s return-to-flight plans for Vulcan. The initial focus of Blue Origin’s investigation is on the engine compartment of the New Glenn. The New Glenn and Vulcan rockets share the same main engine: Blue Origin’s methane-fueled BE-4.
Amazon purchased the nine Atlas V launches from ULA in 2021, scooping up all of the launch provider’s unsold Atlas Vs as the program started winding down in favor of ULA’s Vulcan launch vehicle. Amazon used one of the Atlas Vs to launch two prototype satellites in 2023, then used the other eight to launch operational Amazon Leo satellites beginning last year.
In 2022, Amazon secured contracts to launch most of the remaining Amazon Leo megaconstellation on ULA’s Vulcan, Europe’s Ariane 6, and Blue Origin’s New Glenn rockets. Amazon has since booked 13 rides on the Falcon 9 rockets from SpaceX, whose Starlink broadband network is a competitor of Amazon Leo.
The Vulcan rocket is supposed to be the workhorse for Amazon Leo. The tech and retail giant has reserved 38 launches on Vulcan rockets and funded the...