--- type: entity entity_type: protocol name: Space Reactor-1 Freedom (SR-1 Freedom) domain: space-development status: active launch_date: 2028-12 --- # Space Reactor-1 Freedom (SR-1 Freedom) **Type:** Nuclear electric propulsion spacecraft **Status:** Active development, launch scheduled December 2028 **Organization:** NASA **Mission:** First nuclear-powered spacecraft to travel beyond Earth orbit (uncrewed Mars mission) ## Overview Space Reactor-1 Freedom is NASA's first operational nuclear-powered interplanetary spacecraft, announced March 24, 2026 alongside the Gateway program cancellation. The spacecraft repurposes the Gateway Power and Propulsion Element (PPE) — already completed and validated hardware — for a nuclear electric propulsion demonstration mission to Mars. ## Technical Architecture **Propulsion:** Nuclear Electric Propulsion (NEP) - Nuclear fission reactor generates electricity - Electricity powers ion thrusters - Distinct from Nuclear Thermal Propulsion (NTP) where nuclear heat directly expands propellant - Provides specific impulse of ~3,000-10,000 seconds (vs NTP ~900s, chemical ~450s) - Lower thrust than NTP but higher efficiency, optimized for cargo missions **Hardware Origin:** Gateway Power and Propulsion Element (PPE) - Most expensive and technically complex component of the canceled Gateway program - Already completed and qualified hardware - Featured advanced solar-electric propulsion combined with compact fission reactor ## Mission Profile - **Destination:** Mars (uncrewed) - **Launch:** December 2028 - **Significance:** First nuclear propulsion system moving from R&D to operational program - **Mission objectives:** Not clearly specified in initial announcement (unclear if primarily propulsion demonstration or includes science payload) ## Strategic Context Represents a 5-10 year acceleration of nuclear propulsion deployment compared to a clean-sheet program by leveraging already-qualified hardware. Demonstrates NASA's prioritization of cargo/infrastructure delivery for near-term nuclear propulsion applications rather than crewed transit. ## Timeline - **2026-03-24** — Program announced at NASA Ignition event alongside Gateway cancellation - **2028-12** — Scheduled launch date ## Sources - NASASpaceFlight, March 2026 - NASA official announcement, March 24, 2026 - Futurism coverage - New Space Economy analysis