Nebula-1
Nebula-1 is an under-development, two-stage, small-lft partially recoverable launch vehicle with the capacity to lift up to two tonnes into Low Earth orbit. It is the first orbital launch vehicle by Chinese commercial firm Deep Blue Aerospace and it employs kerosene and liquid oxygen for propulsion. The first flight of the rocket is anticipated to occur in 2026.
History
As part of the developement process for the partially resuable Nebula-1 launch vehicle, Deep Blue has carried out a series of vertical-takeoff-vertical-landing tests.On October 13, 2021, Deep Blue completed a 100-meter level launch and landing test with its Nebula M1 VTVL test stage.
On May 6, 2022, the Nebula M1 completed a one kilometer test, that included a vertical takeoff and vertical landing above Tongchuan, Shaanxi Providence.
On September 22, 2024, Deep Blue conducted a 10 km VTVL hop test, which featured the first flight of the Thunder-R kerosene-liquid oxygen engines. The test ended with a hard landing; nevertheless, the company completed 10 of its 11 objectives during the test flight.
Sometime between July 28 and August 2, 2025, Deep Blue likely conducted a fourth VTVL test with a Nebula 1 test-stage. Satellite imagery of Deep Blue's launch site at Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center, when compared to satellite imagery taken on July 28, suggests that the test-stage may have crashed.
On 30 September 2025, Deep Blue announced that is has successfully completed a static-fire test of Nebula-1's second-stage engine. The second-stage engine and its power system functioned stably and continuously for 308 seconds.
On 1 November 2025, Deep Blue successfully carried out a nine-enigne full-system static-fire test of Nebula-1's first stage propulsion system under simulated flight conditions, including "...pre-launch preparation, kerosene loading, liquid oxygen loading, engine pre-cooling, pre-launch pressurization, engine ignition, and shutdown processes. It was a comprehensive verification of the entire chain of systems, including rocket structure, ground launch support, propulsion, control, and safety control."