Space

USC students set world record with high-flying rocket launch (video)

The University of Southern California’s student rocketeers have done it again.

The USC Rocket Propulsion Lab (USCRPL) — which in 2019 became the first student organization ever to launch a rocket to space — sent its Aftershock II vehicle 470,400 feet (89.09 miles, or 143.38 kilometers) above Earth last month. That smashed the amateur altitude record of 380,000 feet (71.97 miles, or 115.82 km), which was set in 2004 by the Civilian Space Exploration Team.

“This achievement represents several engineering firsts,” Ryan Kraemer, the executive engineer of USCRPL and an undergrad majoring in mechanical engineering, said in a statement on Friday (Nov. 15). “Aftershock II is distinguished by the most powerful solid-propellant motor ever fired by students and the most powerful composite case motor made by amateurs.”

Photo showing the nose cone of the USC Rocket Propulsion Lab’s Aftershock II rocket in space on Oct. 20, 2024. (Image credit: USCRPL)

USCRPL’s groundbreaking April 2019 liftoff, from New Mexico’s Spaceport America, involved a rocket called Traveler IV. (Traveler is also the name of the horse ridden by USC’s Trojan mascot.) That vehicle reached  a maximum altitude of 339,800 feet (64.4 miles, or 103.6 km) — above the 62-mile-high (100 km) Kármán Line, which many people view as the boundary of space — and a top speed of 3,386 mph (5,449 kph).


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