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NASA Completes First Nuclear Propulsion Tests Since 1960s

NASA's tests validated fluid dynamics and structural stability of a non-nuclear reactor, supporting future Mars missions with nuclear thermal propulsion's higher efficiency.

  • At NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, engineers completed a cold-flow test campaign of the first full-scale flight reactor engineering development unit since the 1960s, built by BWX Technologies to simulate propellant flow, producing detailed data on vibrations and pressure waves over several months.
  • To de-risk reactor behaviour, the campaign aimed to validate analytical tools, flight instrumentation and control systems, and advance nuclear thermal propulsion to boost payload and shorten transit times.
  • Material and simulator testing confirmed DOE and industry partnerships advanced low-enriched fuels surviving 4,600°F, while General Atomics Electromagnetic Systems exposed reactor fuel to 4,220°F hydrogen flows for 20 minutes and 2,600 Kelvin over six cycles.
  • After DRACO's end, officials moved responsibility to NASA, with cold-flow results guiding manufacturing and boosting industry interest in near-term nuclear propulsion systems.
  • Budget pressures persist after the FY2026 budget cut removed $531 million from NASA's Space Technology Mission Directorate, canceling DRACO funding, while NASA's crewed Mars plans face technical hurdles and cost concerns soon.
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Research & Development World broke the news in on Sunday, February 9, 2025.
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