How ATMOS Space Cargo is shaping Europes spaceflight future through reentry  capsules
Date:
Tue, 17 Jun 2025 15:04:12 +0000
Description:
As space-based research and manufacturing ramp up, a market is emerging for  returning payloads to The post How ATMOS Space Cargo is shaping Europes  spaceflight future through reentry capsules appeared first on  NASASpaceFlight.com .
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As space-based research and manufacturing ramp up, a market is emerging for  returning payloads to Earth affordably and reliably. German startup ATMOS  Space Cargo is meeting that need with a new generation of reentry vehicles  built around an inflatable heat shield. 
Already flight-tested, the novel system positions Europe as a serious  contender in the field of orbital logistics. NSF spoke to Sebastian Klaus, 
the founder & CEO of ATMOS Space Cargo, about surviving reentry and why  Europes next big space breakthrough might be on the way back down  not up. 
 
The technology builds upon NASAs Low-Earth Orbit Flight Test of an Inflatable  Decelerator (LOFTID), which successfully demonstrated its technology in  November 2022. The mission aimed to test a new type of aeroshell, designed to  slow down spacecraft during atmospheric entry by utilizing its large surface  area to generate drag. LOFID was itself part of the agencys Hypersonic  Inflatable Aerodynamic Decelerator (HIAD) project, which flew a series of  suborbital tests starting in 2009. 
 
The project sought to develop lighter and more compact inflatable heat 
shields that might be used for lunar cargo return or for landing heavy  payloads on Mars, in addition to the more immediate benefits of low-cost 
Earth return missions. Having proven that these inflatable shields could  deploy and maintain their shape, the tests went on to validate their  structural integrity during hypersonic reentry and prove that the concept  could survive real-world atmospheric heating and deceleration. 
We have designed our vehicle pretty much based on where NASA took off, and we  added some special details in the inflation technology, Klaus explains. It  builds upon decades of atmospheric reentry research, but is the most advanced  technology that is out there right now. 
The concept involves extracting high-energy air from the boundary layer  between the vehicles heat shield and the surrounding shock layer that is  formed in front of it. This captured flow is then used to pressurize and  inflate the vehicle. Its a novel and somewhat counterintuitive approach,  exposing the structure to hot plasma, controlling and repurposing the hot  boundary layer air as a functional asset. The LOFTID demonstrator is 
recovered on the deck of the recovery ship. (Credit: NASA) 
 Phoenix 1 
The companys debut Phoenix 1 recently flew on SpaceXs Bandwagon-3 rideshare  mission on April 21  a mid-inclination mission to a 500 km low-Earth orbit  (LEO). Phoenix 1 was built quickly as a minimum viable product (MVP) on a  limited budget to gather initial flight data. 
The capsule remained attached to Falcon 9s upper stage while the other  payloads were deployed. Phoenix 1 finally separated around 90 minutes into 
the mission over Los Angeles, following the upper stages deorbit maneuver. 
SpaceX did us a great favor by giving us a little kick to go into the  atmosphere, Klaus emphasizes, which meant we didnt have to bring our own  propulsion. This simplified the capsules initial design and also removed the  risk of any issue with onboard propulsion, potentially leaving the capsule in  orbit. Onboard view of Phoenix 1 before it was deployed during the 
Bandwagon-3 mission. (Credit: SpaceX) 
Around 30 minutes later, Phoenix 1 began its reentry and ultimately reached a  splashdown in the South Atlantic Ocean. The original plan was for Phoenix to  instead reenter east of Madagascar in the Indian Ocean, and ATMOS had spent  six months planning the recovery of the capsule using ships. However, just  five weeks prior to the launch, the trajectory of the Bandwagon mission was  altered to satisfy constraints of one of the main payloads. This is an  accepted risk for the smaller payloads on these rideshare missions, which are  paying a significantly cheaper price to fly. 
The alteration changed the splashdown location enough to scrap those months 
of recovery preparations and left little time to make new plans. The news  dropped on a Friday, and ATMOS immediately scrambled its guidance, 
navigation, and control (GNC) team, which worked through the weekend. By  Sunday evening, they had a solution, including the identification of 
different ground stations they could use during Phoenix 1s descent. 
In space terms, five weeks is nothing, so we literally put an antenna in the  jungle in Brazil, worked with a ground station in Ecuador, and had a lot of  amateurs in the community supporting us. These amateur ground stations picked  up a lot of UHF data, which helped ATMOS collect over 135,000 telemetry 
points along the track. Render of Phoenix 1 in orbit. (Credit: ATMOS Space  Cargo) 
The new landing location, around 2,000 km off the coast of Brazil, was beyond  the range of the chartered aircraft, which had hoped to capture imagery and  data as Phoenix completed its descent. The last phase of the reentry was  blacked out, Klaus notes, we didnt have data all the way to splashdown 
because it was just out of the range of ground stations. We rented a little  single-engine propeller plane with a Starlink terminal under the windshield 
of the cockpit. We had a live connection to our mission control center here 
in Europe. It was wild. We had to improvise a bit! 
Four payloads onboard also returned data during this demonstration  a  radiation monitor from the German Aerospace Center (DLR), as well as payloads  for the United Kingdoms Frontier Space and Japans IDDK. 
 Designing for reusability 
Whereas traditional reentry capsules commonly separate from a service module,  which contains propulsion, solar panels, and tanks, Phoenix is intended to be  fully reusable. Our goal is to bring everything back, says Klaus, noting that  Phoenix 2 will return with its own propulsion system, solar panels, avionics,  and communications when it flies next summer. This is an economic decision as  much as a sustainable one, and ATMOS is approaching this with realistic  expectations. Weve all seen with SpaceX over and over again how difficult it  is to bring something back from orbital velocities and get it to be reusable,  he adds, but thats what were aiming for. Render of Phoenix 1 with its  inflatable heatshield. (Credit: ATMOS Space Cargo) 
ATMOS draws its name from its primary focus on returning payloads through the  atmosphere and back to Earth. The company grew quickly following the summer 
of 2023 after receiving a round of seed funding. Studying NASAs International  Space Station (ISS) Utilization Statistics document, it became clear that  biomedical research is the predominant type of research conducted aboard the  ISS and would be a promising downmass market. Examples include protein  crystallisation, 3D printing of human tissue, and research into cancers and  the aging process. 
The team set out to build a vehicle that is designed around the 
standard-sized payloads used on the ISS, known as mid-deck lockers. We said,  if we build a vehicle that has the same conditions as the ISS, in terms of  pressurized atmosphere, providing power and data, and if we can make that in 
a way where its completely automated, or remotely controlled, then, probably,  we will be able to find customers, Klaus explained. The design was set to  accommodate three of these lockers, providing a 100 kg payload capacity and  100 watts of power. 
With the principles established, the team began to construct its first  prototype. We always said its going to be an inflatable heat shield, says  Klaus. It was quite the project to do in less than two years! One of the  things that is unique about this area of Europe is that there are a lot of  partners and suppliers that you do not necessarily have in all places in the  US, for example. With a strong automotive industry in Germany that was 
already familiar with hardware-in-the-loop testing, ATMOS was able to 
leverage local resources to develop its project on a budget. Render of 
Phoenix during reentry. (Credit: ATMOS Space Cargo) 
The finished design for Phoenix 1 had a total mass of 250 kg and measured 1.5  m in diameter and 1.2 m in length, specifically designed to fit into an XL  slot on SpaceXs Transporter and Bandwagon rideshare missions. 
 Phoenix 2 
The next Phoenix to launch will carry its own propulsion system, using  thrusters from European startup ISP Tech. The good thing about them is they  are green propulsion; ethane and nitrous oxide, Klaus noted. The more 
standard choice of Hydrazine used in thrusters is toxic, he points out, and  requires the support crew to wear protective suits both when fuelling or  returning to a landed vehicle, such as Boeings X-37B, due to the risk of  residue in the thrusters. You dont want to have that on your vehicle,  especially if its a reusable vehicle that you want to recover and then  relaunch, he said. See Also Europes Future In Space Forum Bandwagon-3 Mission  Forum NSF Store Click here to Join L2 
These small thrusters provide an impressive 290 seconds of specific impulse.  Six of these will be used for pitch and yaw control, while smaller thrusters  will provide roll control, collectively enabling Phoenix to control its  reentry trajectory when deorbiting and to perform any necessary  station-keeping. 
The next flight will remain in orbit for two to four weeks before slowing 
down to around 150 meters per second, where it will enter the atmosphere. The  plan for the next flight is to fly to Santa Maria. Theres an island in the  Atlantic Ocean that belongs to Portugal, so it will be the first reentry  towards European territory! Klaus said. The capsule will be filled to 
capacity with 100 kg of payload. There remains a small amount of risk, as 
they have yet to receive data all the way to splashdown. However, ATMOS is  fully confident in the orbital phase of the mission, where most of the data  will actually be generated. 
The company is equally confident in the accuracy of the capsules landing,  which, in simulations, achieved a precision of less than 100 m from the  target. Thats something you cannot even achieve right now with, say, a Dragon  because these classic vehicles pop parachutes at an altitude of a few  kilometers and from there just drift down with the wind. We can steer all the  way until we touch the water, and that enables us to land very precisely.  Render of the Phoenix control surfaces (Credit: ATMOS Space Cargo) 
The donut design of the vehicle is purposely asymmetric, with the vehicles  center of mass offset to one side. That makes the vehicle fly at an angle of  attack that creates a lift vector, Klaus explains. By adjusting the direction  of this lift, known as a bank angle maneuver, the vehicle can curve left,  right, up, or down as it reenters the atmosphere. Two aerodynamic surfaces  control this, along with some small roll control thrusters located at the 
back of the capsule. The cool thing about our technology is we can use it all  the way from orbit, through the entry interface point where we feel the  atmosphere for the first time, all the way to a splashdown in the ocean. 
ATMOS has few competitors, of which Varda Space and Inversion Space both 
apply parachutes for the final descent of their return capsules. Phoenix  doesnt require parachutes due to its large surface area and low mass, 
allowing its shape to essentially act as a parachute. The ballistic  coefficient, as its called, is lower than NASAs LOFTID demonstrator. Youre  flying very slow, explains Klaus. At splashdown, you have less than 15 meters  per second of terminal velocity, and thats the equivalent of jumping from a  five or 10-meter stair into a pool. Thats what keeps the system very simple,  and in spaceflight, simplicity is king. The less systems you have, the less  that can fail. 
With this in mind, ATMOS is comfortable with ocean landings, where the shocks  of impact are much lower than on land. Seawater corrosion remains a challenge  that can affect systems and reusability, but SpaceX has proven this to be  solvable with its Dragon capsules. Render of Phoenix as it is deployed into  orbit. (Credit: ATMOS Space Cargo) 
ATMOS intends to launch the enhanced Phoenix 2 vehicle next summer, with  another capsule following either late that same year or in early 2027.  Launches will then begin to ramp up to three or four annually, building up to  monthly flights. 
The goal is that, eventually, we will be able to enable a rideshare service  from space back down [to Earth], notes Klaus. What youre getting with  Transporter or Bandwagon for the way up, we want to enable that for the way  down. If you have a mid-deck locker or a cubesat-sized payload, maybe a  University payload, we want to be able to send that on a regular basis to  space and back again. I think thats going to make a huge difference,  especially for the research community. 
The vehicle is designed to be launcher-agnostic and is compatible with a  standard 24-inch ESPA separation ring  the structural adaptor used to carry  and deploy secondary payloads alongside a primary satellite. This would allow  Phoenix to launch on New Glenn, Ariane 6, and Vega, or aboard smaller rockets  like Electron and Spectrum. Right now, SpaceX is the most reliable launcher  and the most cost-efficient launcher, so I think theres a high chance we 
might be flying with SpaceX on the next mission, he notes. 
 Future use-cases 
For that mission, Atmos has been working with the Portuguese space agency to  acquire the necessary reentry license in time for its second mission. Were  very much looking forward to bringing that vehicle back to European soil,  Klaus adds. Looking further into the future, ATMOS is closely monitoring  progress on the various commercial space stations that will replace the ISS  and, inevitably, host more research customers with payloads to return to  Earth. Phoenix prototype prepares for drop testing. (Credit: ATMOS Space  Cargo) 
A Phoenix 3 is already in the design stage, which would increase payload  capacity to around 1,000 kg. This can be scaled even further, Klaus points  out, until they reach a calculated limit of around 25,000 kg. At this point,  the square-cubic rule dictates that the combined mass of the gas and 
inflation system would become prohibitively heavy in comparison to the heat  shield. Nonetheless, he notes, 25 tons means a fully filled shipping 
container is something we could bring back from space with this technology, 
so it opens a lot of possibilities. 
The company is currently exploring rapid response and point-to-point  applications for the military through a partnership with ARX Robotics. The  technology may even be applied to returning smaller rocket upper stages in 
the future. This idea was originally included in an unsuccessful pitch to the  European Space Agency in collaboration with Isar Aerospace in 2022, but has  since been contracted by the European Commission for its Inflatable Concept  Aeroshell for the Reuse of Upper Stages (ICARUS) project. Klaus stresses that  returning upper stages is especially difficult, as SpaceXs Starship has  proven. 
One of the use-cases were looking at is the Vega upper stage. Its a scalable  technology, so you might as well use it to bring back something like an 
Ariane 6 upper stage, and thats what inflatable heat shields are really  designed for  to slow you down from orbital velocities, Klaus explained. 
The ICARUS project is aiming for a suborbital demonstration in around two  years, after which it would hopefully move onto an orbital test. Klaus can 
see similar potential for the technology in returning satellites for 
servicing and reuse. 
There are great companies out there [such as] Astroscale and Clearspace  already working on the capability to grab a satellite in space and then drag  it into the atmosphere. Now, if you combine that technology with ours, thats 
a really cool capability we havent had since the Space Shuttle days! 
 (Lead image: A render of the Phoenix craft reentering Earths atmosphere.  Credit: Atmos Space Cargo) 
 
The post How ATMOS Space Cargo is shaping Europes spaceflight future through  reentry capsules appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story:
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/06/atmos-space-cargo/
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