On Thu, Jul 23, 2015 at 5:30 PM, Anthony Jackson <xxxxxx@iii.com> wrote:

I can’t tell what’s distinctive about this. Laser-propelled rockets have been in testing for years. I assume there’s something there, perhaps it’s the measured 500 Isp?



I think it's also the change in the medium used to provide the actual thrust. Instead of layers of solid ablative metal being burned off. That process likely involves some *serious* regeneration issues. This article says hydrogen fuel provides thrust after passage through an exchanger heated by the externally-generated microwaves. The result craft would simply "glide back to the launch pad, refuel, and will be ready for its next flight."

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Richard Aiken

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