WASHINGTON — Impulse Space, a startup focused on space transportation and exploration, announced Feb. 21 that retired Space Force general John “Jay” Raymond has joined its board of directors.
Based in Redondo Beach, California, Impulse Space was founded in 2021 by Tom Mueller, a founding member of SpaceX who helped design the Merlin rocket engine that powers the Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy launch vehicles.
Impulse Space develops orbital maneuvering vehicles for last-mile payload delivery in low Earth orbit and beyond.
Raymond was the Space Force’s first chief of space operations from 2019 to 2022. His appointment “comes amid a period of strong momentum for Impulse in the government sector,” the company said in a news release.
Impulse Space recently won two Small Business Innovation Research Program (SBIR) contracts under the SpaceWERX Tactically Responsive Space challenge. About 232 companies submitted 302 proposals for this project. Impulse Space was one of 19 awardees.
As a board member, Raymond will “support and advise the Impulse team in its work with government partners and customers,” the company said.
Raymond in a statement described Impulse Space as “an innovative company led by our nation’s leading propulsion experts, focused on responsive space mobility.”
Impulse Space in November launched Mira, a small transfer vehicle flying a mission called LEO Express-1, which successfully deployed a cubesat. The company earlier this year unveiled a new larger vehicle called Helios, designed to serve as a transfer stage for transporting satellites from low Earth orbit to geostationary orbit in less than a day.
“With the two awards from SpaceWERX and the guidance from General Raymond, Impulse can help bring the government closer to its goal of unlocking a more responsive space profile,” said Mueller.
One of the SBIR contracts is to demonstrate rapid refueling…
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