With Starfall, SpaceX eyes an edge in global cargo delivery from orbit(arstechnica.com)
arstechnica.com
With Starfall, SpaceX eyes an edge in global cargo delivery from orbit
https://arstechnica.com/space/2026/06/with-starfall-spacex-eyes-an-edge-in-global-cargo-delivery-from-orbit/
8 comments
Between the article's opening "developed ... under a veil of secrecy", and closing comments about the DoD being very active in sub-orbital delivery, I'd assume that the Pentagon has paid for 'most everything so far.
The FAA's paperwork talks about pharmaceutical (zero-g manufacturing) uses. If it was a real use case, that industry has plenty of $billions.
Similar anyone else who imagines that he could somehow synthesize unobtainium in zero g, and can raise money to try it.
The DoD's use case seems iffy to me. The current version of Starfall looks pretty useless for delivering weapons directly to targets. Ballistic missiles and their reentry vehicles are mature technologies. Vs. this big (needs a large-diameter rocket to launch) and slow hockey puck would let your target's air defenses play in Easy Mode.
More-plausible DoD uses:
- Development platform. For technologies they'll later (or secretly) use on more threatening platforms.
- Messaging. If the Pentagon is "reinforcing" US forces near Elbonia with delivered-from-space stuff, it's decent way to say "we are A-listers, and we are serious".
- Logistics & Supply cheat code. Over the years, I've read too many articles about US forces having a complete disaster of a supply & logistics chain for mission-critical supplies & spare parts. If the Pentagon's (say) F-35's in some critical spot were grounded for lack of replacement oil filters, then this kinda tech could let them bypass the FUBAR Dept. and get uber-critical stuff to where it was really needed.
The FAA's paperwork talks about pharmaceutical (zero-g manufacturing) uses. If it was a real use case, that industry has plenty of $billions.
Similar anyone else who imagines that he could somehow synthesize unobtainium in zero g, and can raise money to try it.
The DoD's use case seems iffy to me. The current version of Starfall looks pretty useless for delivering weapons directly to targets. Ballistic missiles and their reentry vehicles are mature technologies. Vs. this big (needs a large-diameter rocket to launch) and slow hockey puck would let your target's air defenses play in Easy Mode.
More-plausible DoD uses:
- Development platform. For technologies they'll later (or secretly) use on more threatening platforms.
- Messaging. If the Pentagon is "reinforcing" US forces near Elbonia with delivered-from-space stuff, it's decent way to say "we are A-listers, and we are serious".
- Logistics & Supply cheat code. Over the years, I've read too many articles about US forces having a complete disaster of a supply & logistics chain for mission-critical supplies & spare parts. If the Pentagon's (say) F-35's in some critical spot were grounded for lack of replacement oil filters, then this kinda tech could let them bypass the FUBAR Dept. and get uber-critical stuff to where it was really needed.
The loitering capability suggests it's not logistics (it'd be much cheaper and easier to send it ballistic).
Messaging is a good guess, though. Launch it at the start of a crisis and then threaten to de-orbit it on top of an opponent unless they cease fire / withdraw / negotiate etc. Doesn't really matter what's in it, the important part is that it's a concrete demonstration of capability & intent.
Unlikely to worry China or (possibly) Russia much, but would likely be pretty effective against second tier powers.
Messaging is a good guess, though. Launch it at the start of a crisis and then threaten to de-orbit it on top of an opponent unless they cease fire / withdraw / negotiate etc. Doesn't really matter what's in it, the important part is that it's a concrete demonstration of capability & intent.
Unlikely to worry China or (possibly) Russia much, but would likely be pretty effective against second tier powers.
Loitering capability?
> This version of Starfall is not capable of de-orbiting itself but instead relies upon its launch vehicle to guide it back into the atmosphere.
> This version of Starfall is not capable of de-orbiting itself but instead relies upon its launch vehicle to guide it back into the atmosphere.
> Starfall weighs approximately 4,600 pounds (2.1 metric tons) with a capacity for about 2,200 pounds (1 metric ton) of payload, for a total weight of 6,800 pounds (3.1 metric tons).
Dropping 3 tons of kinetic force or a literal metric ton of explosives on top of a target seems like a great DoD use case.
Dropping 3 tons of kinetic force or a literal metric ton of explosives on top of a target seems like a great DoD use case.
Ah... Starfall is a big hockey puck. Actual warheads - especially kinetic impactors - have much pointier shapes, so air drag won't slow them to a crawl before they reach their targets. And fins, so they can steer at their targets - vs. "oops, there was a bit more cross-wind; it missed by 400 feet".
For the use cases you mention, Starfall would basically be an expensive square wheel.
For the use cases you mention, Starfall would basically be an expensive square wheel.
Seems like the sort of capability any other nation would immediately consider shooting out of the sky
It can loiter in orbit, so is presumably intended for some form of weapons delivery. But has only cold gas thrusters so doesn't compete with hypersonic skip glide systems.
Is there a paying customer?