... that cools incoming air with hydrogen fuel run through a heat exchanger. The engine, called Sabre, is being developed by UK-based Reactions Engines. The US Air Force Research Lab (AFRL), under a co-operative research and development agreement with...
... at British Aerospace in Stevenage, then for 17 years at the University of Bristol lecturing in Astronautics. In 2009, he joined Reaction Engines Limited as the Future Programmes Director responsible for the overall Skylon vehicle. In 2013, he left...
.../British Aerospace HOTOL project of the 1980s. The current iteration of this design, Skylon D1, under development at Reaction Engines in the UK, requires 77 tonnes of liquid hydrogen fuel to carry a 15-tonne payload module into orbit. Optimised for...
...fuel is used to condense captured air with a heat exchanger, which is then combusted in a rocket engine. A UK-based company, Reaction Engines, has been pioneering this technology, which has the advantage of converting a relatively conventional rocket...
.... At least this latter research was continued, from the 1990s onwards, by Reaction Engines with its Skylon vehicle, incorporating the innovative Synergetic Air-Breathing Rocket Engine (SABRE)… but here we are 30 years later with no flight hardware...
... He previously worked as Programme Manager at Skyrora Ltd, as well as performing consultant systems engineering for Reaction Engines, Airborne Engineering and Raptor Aerospace, and is currently providing consultancy on launcher analysis and spaceport...