SSC Demo-1
SSC Demo-1, also known as Dream Chaser Demo-1, is the planned first flight of the Sierra Space robotic spacecraft Dream Chaser to low Earth orbit under the CRS-2 contract with NASA. Originally scheduled to go to the International Space Station in 2025, In September 2025, NASA announced the mission would not visit the ISS and instead launch in late 2026.
The Dream Chaser division of the Sierra Nevada Corporation was spun-off in April 2021, creating the fully independent Sierra Space Corporation, which assumed full oversight over the Dream Chaser program. The company developed a new reusable spacecraft to provide commercial cargo resupply services to the International Space Station, based on decades of lifting body programs. Under the Commercial Orbital Transportation System program, the company designed Dream Chaser with industrial partner Lockheed Martin.
The company also designed the accompanying Shooting Star cargo module with subcontractor Applied Composites. At the end of mission, the Shooting Star will destructively reenter the atmosphere and the Dream Chaser will land at the Kennedy Space Center's Shuttle Landing Facility.
Spacecraft
The Dream Chaser Cargo System will fly cargo resupply missions to the ISS under NASA's Commercial Resupply Services-2 program. This system features the Shooting Star, an expendable cargo module with solar panels, and the Dream Chaser, a reusable lifting body capable of returning of pressurized cargo to Earth while undergoing maximum re-entry forces of 1.5 g.The Dream Chaser design is derived from NASA's HL-20 Personnel Launch System spaceplane concept from the 1990s, which in turn is descended from over 20,000 hours and six decades of experimental lifting body vehicles, including the X-20 Dyna-Soar, Northrop M2-F2, Northrop M2-F3, Northrop HL-10, Martin X-24A and X-24B, and Martin X-23 PRIME.
The vehicle to be used in SSC Demo-1 is named Tenacity. The Shooting Star carries pressurized and unpressurized cargo, and serves as the power supply for the Dream Chaser. The Shooting Star will have a cargo capacity of. Its design is similar to the Exoliner cargo container shown in Lockheed Martin's Jupiter proposal for NASA's CRS-2.