KEY POINTS
  • Relativity Space, a 3D-printing specialist, launched the inaugural flight of its Terran 1 rocket late on Wednesday night, which successfully met some mission objectives before failing to reach orbit.
  • The rocket reached space, flying for about three minutes before an anomaly caused the engine on its second stage to shut down.
  • Despite not reaching orbit, the mission represents a significant step forward for Relativity, helping demonstrate the viability of its ambitious manufacturing approach.
The company's Terran 1 rocket lifts off from LC-16 at Cape Canaveral, Florida.

Relativity Space, a 3D-printing specialist, launched the inaugural flight of its Terran 1 rocket late on Wednesday night, which successfully met some mission objectives before failing to reach orbit.

Terran 1 lifted off from LC-16, a launchpad at the U.S. Space Force's facility in Cape Canaveral, Florida, and flew for about three minutes. While the rocket cleared a key objective — passing the point of maximum atmospheric pressure during an orbital launch, known as Max Q — its engine sputtered and shut down early, shortly after the second stage separated from the first stage, which is the larger, lower portion of the rocket known as the booster.