Tenacity | |
Type: | Lifting body spaceplane |
Serial: | DC101 |
Owner: | Sierra Nevada Corporation |
Manufacturer: | Sierra Nevada Corporation |
Power: | Solar panels |
Rocket: | Vulcan Centaur |
First Flight Date: | NET 2025 (planned)[1] |
First Flight: | SNC Demo-1 |
Programme: | Dream Chaser |
Previous: | Ascension |
Dream Chaser Tenacity (DC101) is the first Dream Chaser spacecraft expected to fly in space. Manufactured by the Sierra Nevada Corporation, it will first fly to the International Space Station as part of the SNC Demo-1 mission in 2025, under the CRS-2 contract.[2]
The Sierra Nevada Corporation was awarded a CRS-2 contract for by NASA for six operational resupply spaceflights to the International Space Station. SNC Demo-1 is a demo flight that will precede the operational resupply flights if the mission is successful.[3] Tenacity and other Dream Chasers will be mated with a Shooting Star module, which will provide an additional of payload capacity, in addition to the carried by the spaceplane. The module will be separated from the Dream Chaser prior to reentry and burn up in the atmosphere, while the Dream Chaser vehicle will perform a runway landing to be reused.[4]
In 2023, Tenacity was still under development. Overall, the spacecraft's structure was largely complete, but it was still being prepared for the mission.
By 2024, the spacecraft and its Shooting Star module were stacked and undergoing vibration and acoustics tests at NASA's Neil Armstrong Test Facility. Additionally, the Vulcan Centaur rocket that will carry it had its maiden flight in 8 January 2024, paving the way for Tenacity's first launch.[5] In April 2024, it was reported that Tenacity would be arriving at Kennedy Space Center imminently.[6]
The Sierra Space team named its first orbit capable Dream Chaser Tenacity as a tribute to all the years of hard work they undertook for the Spacecraft to reach its maiden flight .