Massive, AI-Powered Robots Are 3D-Printing Entire Rockets
Relativity
Space may have the biggest metal 3D printers in the world, and they're
cranking out parts to reinvent the rocket industry here—and on Mars.
To make a 3D-printable rocket, Relativity Space simplified the design of many components, including the engine.Photograph: Relativity
For
a factory where robots toil around the clock to build a rocket with
almost no human labor, the sound of grunts echoing across the parking
lot make for a jarring contrast.
“That’s
Keanu Reeves’ stunt gym,” says Tim Ellis, the chief executive and
cofounder of Relativity Space, a startup that wants to combine 3D printing and artificial intelligence
to do for the rocket what Henry Ford did for the automobile. As we walk
among the robots occupying Relativity’s factory, he points out the
just-completed upper stage of the company’s rocket, which will soon be
shipped to Mississippi for its first tests. Across the way, he says,
gesturing to the outside world, is a recording studio run by Snoop Dogg.
Neither
of those A-listers have paid a visit to Relativity’s rocket factory,
but the presence of these unlikely neighbors seems to underscore the
company’s main talking point: It can make rockets anywhere. In an ideal
cosmos, though, its neighbors will be even more alien than Snoop Dogg.
Relativity wants to not just build rockets, but to build them on Mars.
How exactly? The answer, says Ellis, is robots—lots of them.
Roll
up the loading bay doors at Relativity’s Los Angeles headquarters and
you’ll find four of the largest metal 3D printers in the world, churning
out rocket parts day and night. The latest model of the company’s
proprietary printer, dubbed Stargate, stands 30 feet tall and has two
massive robotic arms that protrude like tentacles from the machine. The
Stargate printers will manufacture about 95 percent, by mass, of
Relativity’s first rocket, named Terran-1. The only parts that won’t be
printed are the electronics, cables, and a handful of moving parts and
rubber gaskets.
Jordan
Noone, Relativity's CTO and cofounder, stands beside the second version
of the Stargate 3D printer at the company's headquarters. Photograph: RelativityTo make a rocket 3D-printable,
Ellis’s team had to totally rethink the way rockets are designed. As a
result, Terran-1 will have 100 times fewer parts than a comparable
rocket. Its Aeon engine, for instance, consists of just 100 parts,
whereas a typical liquid-fueled rocket would have thousands. By
consolidating parts and optimizing them for 3D printing, Ellis says
Relativity will be able to go from raw materials to the launch pad in
just 60 days—in theory, anyway. Relativity hasn’t yet assembled a full
Terran-1 and doesn’t expect the rocket to fly until 2021 at the
earliest.
“A full-scale test will be the biggest milestone for
them to prove this new technology,” says Shagun Sachdeva, a senior
analyst at Northern Sky Research, a space consultancy. Then the company
can start to address the other questions about its approach, such as
whether there’s a need for a new rocket to pop into existence every 60
days.
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Relativity
thinks it will find its niche. Fully assembled, Terran-1 will stand
about 100 feet tall, and be capable of delivering satellites weighing up
to 2,800 pounds to low Earth orbit. That puts it above small satellite
launchers like Rocket Lab’s Electron but well under the payload capacity of massive rockets like SpaceX’s Falcon 9. Ellis says it will be particularly well-suited to carrying medium-sized satellites.
Relativity
isn’t the only rocket company using 3D printing—SpaceX, Blue Origin,
Rocket Lab, and others also use it to print select parts. But Ellis
thinks the space industry needs to think bigger. In the long term, Ellis
sees 3D-printed rockets as the key to transporting critical
infrastructure to and from the surface of Mars. These rockets could, for
example, be used to loft science experiments into orbit around Mars or
return samples to Earth.
Ellis, 29, and his cofounder, 26-year-old Jordan Noone, have been building rockets since college, where they worked on the University of Southern California’s prestigious rocketry team before taking jobs at Blue Origin and SpaceX.
At Blue Origin, Ellis helped set up the company’s additive
manufacturing program. While there, he began to envision a robotic
rocket factory that barely needs a human’s hand.
First, though, he
needed to get some giant 3D printers. At the heart of Relativity’s
robotic rocket factory is Stargate, which Ellis claims is the largest
metal 3D printer in the world. The first version of Stargate is about 15
feet tall and consists of three robotic arms. The arms are used to weld
metal, monitor the printer’s progress, and correct for defects.
To
print a large component, such as a fuel tank or rocket body, the
printer feeds miles of a thin, custom-made aluminum alloy wire along the
length of an arm to its tip, where a plasma arc melts the metal. The
arm then deposits the molten metal in thin layers, orchestrating its
movements according to patterns programmed in the machine’s software.
Meanwhile, the printer head at the tip of the arm blows out a
non-oxidizing gas to create a sort of “clean room” at the deposition
site.
Every
new iteration of the Stargate printer has been significantly bigger
than the last, allowing it to churn out very large rocket parts in one
piece. Video: RelativityRelativity
now has a new version of Stargate that can, in a single go, print even
bigger components, like the rocket’s fairing or fuel chambers. It stands
twice as tall and has only two arms, which can each perform more tasks
than their predecessors. Ellis said its next Stargate will double in
size yet again, which will eventually allow the company to produce
larger rockets.
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The
Stargate printers work well when you need to print large parts quickly,
but for parts that require more precision, such as the rocket’s engine,
Relativity uses the same commercially available metal 3D printers that
other aerospace companies use. These printers use a different printing
technique, in which a laser welds together layers of ultra-fine
stainless steel dust.
Ellis says the real secret to Relativity’s
rockets is the artificial intelligence that tells the printer what to
do. Before a print, Relativity runs a simulation of what the print
should look like. As the arms deposit metal, a suite of sensors captures
visual, environmental, and even audio data. Relativity’s software then
compares the two to improve the printing process. “The defect rate has
gone down significantly because we’ve been able to train the printer,”
Ellis says.
With every new part, the machine learning algorithm
gets better, until it will eventually be able to correct 3D prints on
its own. In the future, the 3D printer will recognize its own mistakes,
cutting and adding metal until it produces a flawless part. Ellis sees
this as the key to taking automated manufacturing to other worlds.
“To
print stuff on Mars you need a system that can adapt to very uncertain
conditions,” Ellis says. “So we're building an algorithm framework that
we think will actually be transferable to printing on other planets.”
Not
everyone is convinced that Relativity’s approach to rocket
manufacturing is the way forward, at least for Earthly concerns. Max
Haot, the CEO of Launcher Space,
a startup that also uses 3D printing, says “everyone is leveraging 3D
printing as fast as they can” in the aerospace industry, in particular
for engine components. “The question is whether 3D printing aluminum
tanks is worth it when compared to the traditional tank manufacturing
methods,” Haot says. “We don't think so, but let's see where they take
it.”
Relativity has already inked deals worth several hundred
million dollars with several major satellite operators, including
Telesat LEO and Momentus. But Arjun Sethi, a partner at Tribe Capital,
which invested in Relativity, sees more than launch services in its
future. He compared it to Amazon Web Services in the way it could
provide critical infrastructure to smaller space companies.
Sachdeva,
of Northern Sky Research, thinks Relativity’s expertise in aerospace 3D
printing could have lasting value beyond its rockets. “Even if we don't
get to the point of full rocket manufacturing on Mars, Relativity may
be able to manufacture other components in orbit,” Sachdeva says.
“That’s a pretty big development for the industry as a whole.”
The company is testing its components as it builds its way up to a full rocket. Video: RelativityStill,
rockets are its first goal. So far it’s been testing its 3D-printed
engine, pressure tanks, and turbopumps. But there’s plenty more to do.
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Once
they have a complete rocket, Ellis and his team will be ready to ship
it to Launch Complex-16 at Kennedy Space Center, in Florida, where
Relativity holds a long-term launchpad lease, alongside SpaceX, Blue
Origin, and the United Launch Alliance. The first flight of an entirely
3D printed rocket will be a major moment in space exploration, but for
Relativity it will be just the start of its long journey to Mars.
Daniel Oberhaus is a staff writer at WIRED, where he covers space exploration and the future of energy. He is the author of Extraterrestrial Languages (MIT Press, 2019) and was previously the news editor at Motherboard.
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