- Source: inbox/queue/2026-03-24-nasa-space-reactor-1-freedom-nuclear-mars-2028.md - Domain: space-development - Claims: 2, Entities: 1 - Enrichments: 1 - Extracted by: pipeline ingest (OpenRouter anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5) Pentagon-Agent: Astra <PIPELINE>
56 lines
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2.3 KiB
Markdown
56 lines
No EOL
2.3 KiB
Markdown
---
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type: entity
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entity_type: protocol
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name: Space Reactor-1 Freedom (SR-1 Freedom)
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domain: space-development
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status: active
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launch_date: 2028-12
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---
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# Space Reactor-1 Freedom (SR-1 Freedom)
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**Type:** Nuclear electric propulsion spacecraft
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**Status:** Active development, launch scheduled December 2028
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**Organization:** NASA
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**Mission:** First nuclear-powered spacecraft to travel beyond Earth orbit (uncrewed Mars mission)
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## Overview
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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.
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## Technical Architecture
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**Propulsion:** Nuclear Electric Propulsion (NEP)
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- Nuclear fission reactor generates electricity
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- Electricity powers ion thrusters
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- Distinct from Nuclear Thermal Propulsion (NTP) where nuclear heat directly expands propellant
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- Provides specific impulse of ~3,000-10,000 seconds (vs NTP ~900s, chemical ~450s)
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- Lower thrust than NTP but higher efficiency, optimized for cargo missions
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**Hardware Origin:** Gateway Power and Propulsion Element (PPE)
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- Most expensive and technically complex component of the canceled Gateway program
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- Already completed and qualified hardware
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- Featured advanced solar-electric propulsion combined with compact fission reactor
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## Mission Profile
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- **Destination:** Mars (uncrewed)
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- **Launch:** December 2028
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- **Significance:** First nuclear propulsion system moving from R&D to operational program
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- **Mission objectives:** Not clearly specified in initial announcement (unclear if primarily propulsion demonstration or includes science payload)
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## Strategic Context
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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.
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## Timeline
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- **2026-03-24** — Program announced at NASA Ignition event alongside Gateway cancellation
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- **2028-12** — Scheduled launch date
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## Sources
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- NASASpaceFlight, March 2026
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- NASA official announcement, March 24, 2026
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- Futurism coverage
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- New Space Economy analysis |