RTLS: Return to Launch Site

Enabling rapid reuse through precision-engineered vertical landings β€” our commitment to sustainable access to space.

RTLS Booster Landing Render

Rendering: Vajra First Stage Performing RTLS to Coastal Pad

What is RTLS?

Return-To-Launch Site (RTLS) is a booster recovery technique where the first stage of the launch vehicle returns to its original launch pad for a vertical powered landing. This method minimizes time between launches, eliminates complex ship recovery logistics, and significantly reduces cost per launch.

Key Capabilities

Integrated Across Gatkul Vehicles

RTLS is embedded in the design of Vajra, Trishul, and PADMA-class launch vehicles. Each stage integrates gimbal-capable Ragam engines, deployable landing legs, and heat-protected control surfaces to enable controlled return to the pad β€” even under high-mass or windy conditions.

Landing Sequence

  1. Boostback Burn: Post-staging retrofire to reverse downrange momentum
  2. Controlled Reentry: Grid fin stabilization + passive drag shaping
  3. Landing Burn: Final descent with throttle ramp-down for soft vertical touch
  4. Landing Pad Lock: Autonomous leg deployment and pad capture confirmation

Strategic Advantages

Roadmap

  1. 2024: Subscale booster hover test (Completed)
  2. 2025: First RTLS from suborbital Vajra vehicle
  3. 2026: Orbital-class RTLS from Trishul-1 core stage
  4. 2027: Multi-pad turnaround testing with PADMA boosters

Landing the Future

With RTLS, we're closing the loop on expendable launch. Every return is a beginning β€” one that brings aerospace logistics closer to terrestrial efficiency. Gatkul’s precision RTLS systems unlock high-cadence launches with minimal overhead, enabling space infrastructure at scale.