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Max Q: It's the final countdown

Hello and welcome back to Max Q! Today we're thinking of the four astronauts heading to the International Space Station. See you guys soon!

In this issue:

  • Artificial gravity space station startup Vast makes its first acquisition

  • Relativity Space sets a launch date

  • News from Momentus, United Launch Alliance and more

Vast acquires Launcher in quest to build artificial gravity space stations

Vast Space, a company that emerged from stealth last September with the aim of building artificial gravity space stations in low Earth orbit, has acquired space tug startup Launcher.

The acquisition, a first for Vast, will give the company access to Launcher’s Orbiter space tug and payload platform and its liquid rocket engine, E-2. Under the terms of the deal, Vast will also absorb all of Launcher’s talent, including Launcher founder Max Haot, who will join as president.

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The deal could be a big accelerator for Vast; the company’s founder, billionaire crypto pioneer Jed McCaleb, said Vast will use the Orbiter tug to test space station subsystems and components in orbit as soon as June of this year, and then again around October. More generally, McCaleb said that acquisitions are not part of Vast’s larger strategy. “Acquisitions typically go pretty wrong,” he said. “For the most part, the combined team now plus a few more folks, we’ll be able to do quite a bit.”

vast space station
vast space station

Vast Space station. Image Credits: Vast Space