Impulse Space Unveils Rigel Engine to Advance Next Generation In-Space Mobility

Impulse Space Unveils Rigel Engine to Advance Next Generation In-Space Mobility

Impulse Space has introduced Rigel, a new 200 lbf-class rocket engine designed to expand in-space mobility capabilities for missions ranging from precision maneuvering to high-energy transport. As the space economy scales, exploration is expanding, government activity is increasing and missions are pushing further into deep space. In-space operations require increasingly dynamic mobility. 

The Rigel engine is built to power this next phase of space mobility, delivering a propulsion system for landers, in-space maneuvering and high delta-v missions. Rigel combines performance with simplified operations. The low-part-count architecture reduces complexity and enables reliable, scalable production at an order of magnitude lower cost than conventional systems, with faster build cycles and easier integration.

Key characteristics of Rigel’s design include:

  • Nontoxic, storable propellants (nitrous oxide and ethane), which enable fueling in hours rather than days
  • Unlimited restartability for multi-phase missions
  • Deep throttleability for controlled descent, landing, and precision maneuvering
  • Long-duration burn capability for high delta-V maneuvers 

By simplifying manufacturing and increasing fault tolerance, Rigel supports higher mission cadence, lower cost per mission, and greater reliability. It can operate as a vehicle’s primary propulsion system or be clustered, suited for a variety of mission types.

Rigel can be used for landers, in-space maneuvering, rendezvous and proximity operations (RPO), interception and other multi-phase missions requiring both a range of thrust and precise control, where reliability is not optional. Its mission set can span operations in Earth’s orbits to distant planetary exploration. For civil use cases in particular, Rigel’s multi-use nature solves the challenges of purpose-built, single-mission engines, with both economic and reliability benefits from flying the same engine across different vehicle platforms and missions. Standardizing on a single propulsion architecture builds flight heritage, reduces unit cost and delivers a manufacturing cadence that legacy systems cannot match.

Rigel traces back to an engine our CEO Tom Mueller began developing prior to founding Impulse – work that directly shaped the company’s early direction. In October 2021, a team of just seven people completed the first successful Rigel hot fire, demonstrating the core architecture and validating the concept early.

As Mira and Helios progressed and Impulse set its sights on the vehicles and missions that come next, we returned to Rigel in 2025. The engine was redesigned and brought back into active development, alongside the buildout of new test infrastructure in Mojave, CA. The team moved from redesign to regular, on-demand hot fires in just four months, demonstrating both the maturity of the architecture and the speed of execution behind it.

Impulse is building a full spectrum of in-space mobility, with propulsion systems spanning from precision maneuvering to high-energy transport. Rigel is a core part of that architecture. Impulse Space said Rigel will become a central part of its broader propulsion portfolio, positioned between Saiph (Mira), focused on precision orbital maneuvering, and Deneb (Helios), designed for high-energy transport across orbits. The company aims to create an end-to-end in-space mobility ecosystem that lowers costs and accelerates future missions beyond Earth.

Click here to know more about Impulse Space's Rigel Propulsion Systems

Publisher: SatNow

GNSS Constellations - A list of all GNSS satellites by constellations

beidou

Satellite NameOrbit Date
BeiDou-3 G4Geostationary Orbit (GEO)17 May, 2023
BeiDou-3 G2Geostationary Orbit (GEO)09 Mar, 2020
Compass-IGSO7Inclined Geosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)09 Feb, 2020
BeiDou-3 M19Medium Earth Orbit (MEO)16 Dec, 2019
BeiDou-3 M20Medium Earth Orbit (MEO)16 Dec, 2019
BeiDou-3 M21Medium Earth Orbit (MEO)23 Nov, 2019
BeiDou-3 M22Medium Earth Orbit (MEO)23 Nov, 2019
BeiDou-3 I3Inclined Geosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)04 Nov, 2019
BeiDou-3 M23Medium Earth Orbit (MEO)22 Sep, 2019
BeiDou-3 M24Medium Earth Orbit (MEO)22 Sep, 2019

galileo

Satellite NameOrbit Date
GSAT0223MEO - Near-Circular05 Dec, 2021
GSAT0224MEO - Near-Circular05 Dec, 2021
GSAT0219MEO - Near-Circular25 Jul, 2018
GSAT0220MEO - Near-Circular25 Jul, 2018
GSAT0221MEO - Near-Circular25 Jul, 2018
GSAT0222MEO - Near-Circular25 Jul, 2018
GSAT0215MEO - Near-Circular12 Dec, 2017
GSAT0216MEO - Near-Circular12 Dec, 2017
GSAT0217MEO - Near-Circular12 Dec, 2017
GSAT0218MEO - Near-Circular12 Dec, 2017

glonass

Satellite NameOrbit Date
Kosmos 2569--07 Aug, 2023
Kosmos 2564--28 Nov, 2022
Kosmos 2559--10 Oct, 2022
Kosmos 2557--07 Jul, 2022
Kosmos 2547--25 Oct, 2020
Kosmos 2545--16 Mar, 2020
Kosmos 2544--11 Dec, 2019
Kosmos 2534--27 May, 2019
Kosmos 2529--03 Nov, 2018
Kosmos 2527--16 Jun, 2018

gps

Satellite NameOrbit Date
Navstar 82Medium Earth Orbit19 Jan, 2023
Navstar 81Medium Earth Orbit17 Jun, 2021
Navstar 78Medium Earth Orbit22 Aug, 2019
Navstar 77Medium Earth Orbit23 Dec, 2018
Navstar 76Medium Earth Orbit05 Feb, 2016
Navstar 75Medium Earth Orbit31 Oct, 2015
Navstar 74Medium Earth Orbit15 Jul, 2015
Navstar 73Medium Earth Orbit25 Mar, 2015
Navstar 72Medium Earth Orbit29 Oct, 2014
Navstar 71Medium Earth Orbit02 Aug, 2014

irnss

Satellite NameOrbit Date
NVS-01Geostationary Orbit (GEO)29 May, 2023
IRNSS-1IInclined Geosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)12 Apr, 2018
IRNSS-1HSub Geosynchronous Transfer Orbit (Sub-GTO)31 Aug, 2017
IRNSS-1GGeostationary Orbit (GEO)28 Apr, 2016
IRNSS-1FGeostationary Orbit (GEO)10 Mar, 2016
IRNSS-1EGeosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)20 Jan, 2016
IRNSS-1DInclined Geosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)28 Mar, 2015
IRNSS-1CGeostationary Orbit (GEO)16 Oct, 2014
IRNSS-1BInclined Geosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)04 Apr, 2014
IRNSS-1AInclined Geosynchronous Orbit (IGSO)01 Jul, 2013
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