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Person wearing lab coat, protective glasses and gloves holds curved thermal protection system tile.
A large, silver, conical-shaped heat shield with segmented panels creating its surface.

Testing NASA-Developed Heat Shield Made by U.S. Company

FLIGHT SUMMARY
With support from a Tipping Point award managed by NASA’s Flight Opportunities program, U.S.-based Varda Space Industries has manufactured a heat shield based on NASA technology and will test how effectively it protects a spacecraft capsule and the payloads inside it from the extreme heat of speeding through Earth’s atmosphere.
 
The Varda W-4 capsule launched via SpaceX into a Sun-synchronous orbit on June 23, 2025, containing payloads with potential to leverage microgravity to advance technologies that support human health. These payloads will return to Earth for further study — but first the W-4 capsule must blaze through temperatures up to 7,000 degrees Fahrenheit as it traverses Earth’s atmosphere on the journey home. Protecting the W-4 capsule from this intense heat is a shield made from C-PICA (Conformal Phenolic Impregnated Carbon Ablator), a powerful yet lightweight protective material originally developed at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley that is enabling commercial space applications.
 
The shield protecting the capsule on its return to Earth includes C-PICA manufactured by Varda. Varda licensed C-PICA from NASA, and the agency’s Flight Opportunities program provided support for flight testing it. This flight test will provide Varda data to evaluate the effectiveness of its C-PICA, comparing it to the standard set by NASA-manufactured C-PICA.

The knowledge transfer of C-PICA’s production process and flight testing support exemplifies how NASA is fostering the successful growth of an orbital economy in the United States.  

 Read more about this flight test below about Testing NASA-Developed Heat Shield Made by U.S. Company

launch date

June 23, 2025

Technology category

Thermal Management Systems

Re-entry Date

TBD

Principal Investigator

Varda Space Industries

About the Flight Test

Comparing Two Sets of C-PICA
This flight is testing the effectiveness of the protection provided by two types of C-PICA: one manufactured by NASA and one manufactured by Varda. This is the first time Varda-manufactured C-PICA tiles are making the journey to space and attempting successful re-entry through Earth’s atmosphere.
 
Preparing for the Flight Test
During Varda’s manufacturing process, the NASA team provided specific data about the characteristics C-PICA must be prepared to withstand as it re-enters Earth’s atmosphere. On Varda’s W-2 flight earlier in 2025, the Flight Opportunities program supported instrumentation of the material, adding sensors to NASA-produced C-PICA. The data from these sensors provided context and guideposts to help maximize Varda’s potential success in manufacturing effective C-PICA heat shield material for its W-4 mission.
 
Protecting Payloads
The full results of the flight test will be seen when the capsule returns to Earth later this year. Its payload is a solution-based crystallization platform that processes pharmaceuticals in microgravity. Researchers aboard the International Space Station and at Varda have found that manufacturing in the near-absence of gravity offers unique opportunities for the development of novel pharmaceutical products.

Upon its return to Earth on February 27, 2025, Varda’s W-2 capsule was protected by a NASA-produced C-PICA heat shield, which produced the fiery streak shown here. Sensor instrumentation helped inform Varda’s manufacturing of the material for the upcoming W-4 flight test, which will use Varda-produced C-PICA for the first time.
Varda Space Industries

For media inquiries, please contact:
Jasmine Hopkins | [email protected]

Photo credits for upper banner images: Varda Space Industries (left two images); SpaceX (right image)

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