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Posted on • Originally published at xoomar.com

NASA Throws Relativity Space Into a Mars Race With SpaceX

NASA’s selection of Relativity Space for a Mars mission has turned Eric Schmidt’s rocket company into something bigger than a comeback story: a commercial contender with a chance to pressure SpaceX on the one destination most closely tied to Elon Musk’s long-term ambitions.

NASA picked Relativity Space for a Mars mission, according to TechCrunch. The available source material does not verify the mission name, instrument count, launch target, detailed spacecraft responsibilities, or contract value. Even with those limits, the strategic signal is clear: NASA is giving Schmidt’s once-stalled rocket company a high-profile role in Mars exploration, and that inevitably puts Relativity in the same conversation as SpaceX.

NASA’s Mars bet turns Relativity Space into SpaceX’s newest pressure point

The mission is being framed as a Mars science effort with practical value for future exploration. The supplied source material does not confirm specific instrument details or the exact measurement plan, but the broader purpose is straightforward: NASA wants better Mars data, and it is looking to a commercial provider to help deliver it.

That is not just academic. For Mars planners, atmospheric and surface conditions are not background noise. They shape entry, descent, landing, surface operations, and risk. Better data can make future lander missions safer and support eventual astronaut missions to the surface.

The sharper read: NASA is using a Mars science mission to test whether a newer commercial provider can handle work that used to sit closer to the government-led core of exploration. Relativity gets prestige. NASA gets another commercial path to Mars. SpaceX gets a reminder that Mars branding is not the same as Mars execution.


The available details make the Relativity Space Mars mission both ambitious and opaque

The Relativity Space Mars mission has a clear strategic target, but several operational details remain unverified in the supplied source material. That includes the mission name, launch date, instrument count, exact division of responsibilities, and contract value.

Those gaps matter. Without confirmed mission architecture or pricing, investors and industry rivals cannot fully judge how much financial risk Relativity is taking on, how aggressive NASA’s expectations are, or how quickly the company must mature from a rocket developer into a deep-space mission partner.

Factor Relativity Space SpaceX
Mars mission in this story NASA-selected Mars science mission; name and date not verified in supplied material No SpaceX-owned Mars mission cited in the source
Relevant NASA approach Commercial-provider selection for Mars work SpaceX remains the company most publicly associated with Mars
Flight record cited Terran 1 launched in March 2023 and failed mid-flight No SpaceX Mars mission is cited in this story
Rocket named for future work Terran R, Relativity’s larger follow-on rocket; role in this mission not verified here SpaceX Mars ambitions are cited, but no own Mars mission has flown
Contract value Not verified in supplied source material Not applicable in this story

The schedule remains the pressure point even without a confirmed date in the supplied material. Relativity must prove that its next phase is more than a financing story. For a company still trying to establish its larger rocket program, the calendar is as dangerous as the engineering.

Eric Schmidt’s takeover gave Relativity a second act after Terran 1 failed mid-flight

Relativity was founded in 2015 by two former SpaceX and Blue Origin engineers with a distinctive manufacturing pitch: use 3D printing far more aggressively to make rockets cheaper and faster to build.

The company’s first rocket, Terran 1, reached launch in March 2023, but failed mid-flight. Relativity then moved away from that initial design and focused on a larger vehicle, Terran R. That pivot changed the story. Relativity stopped looking like a manufacturing experiment and started trying to become a serious commercial launch provider.

Schmidt’s role turned that pivot into a higher-stakes reset. The former Google executive chair took a majority stake last year and installed himself as CEO. TechCrunch reports that he has been quiet about the investment, but has shown interest in orbital data centers and is thought to be using Relativity to launch Lazuili, a space telescope financed by Schmidt Sciences.

Schmidt’s Google background also explains why this story travels beyond space circles. XOOMAR has tracked how Google-linked AI and hardware bets are still being repriced in stories like After 5 Years, $99 Gemini Bet Revives Google Home Speaker, while the economics of AI distribution show up in AI Sellers Get Squeezed in Chi-Hua Chien AI Winners Bet. None of that makes Terran R fly. It does show why Schmidt buying a rocket company is read as a broader hard-tech capital move, not just a billionaire hobby.

NASA, Relativity, SpaceX, and Mars scientists are not chasing the same prize

NASA’s prize is data. The mission is expected to support Mars science and future mission planning, even though the supplied source material does not verify the specific measurement package or cadence.

Relativity’s prize is validation. A Mars mission would say far more than a standard launch contract because it would suggest the company can support a more complex exploration effort after its first rocket failed mid-flight.

SpaceX’s position is different. It remains the company most associated with Mars in the public imagination, largely because Elon Musk has talked about Mars for years. But TechCrunch’s key point is blunt: SpaceX has never sent its own mission to Mars. The Tesla launched in 2018 does not count, and it missed Mars.

For scientists, the corporate rivalry is secondary. Reliable access and dependable data are the point. A delayed or failed mission does not just damage a company’s reputation. It can leave researchers waiting for information that may be important for safer future landings.

Terran R readiness matters more than Schmidt’s name

The central risk is simple: Terran R still has to get to space.

NASA is taking a calculated risk by placing a Mars opportunity with a commercial company that is still proving its next launch system. That can stretch public ambitions because the private partner has reasons to develop capabilities that might later serve other customers. But the farther the mission goes, the thinner the commercial market becomes. Low-Earth orbit has obvious demand. Mars infrastructure is murkier.

Relativity must clear several execution gates before this Mars mission can fully matter:

  • Rocket readiness: Terran R must move from development to flight.
  • Mission architecture: The company and NASA must define and execute the technical plan.
  • Payload coordination: Any science hardware must survive the schedule and mission design.
  • Launch execution: The mission has to leave Earth on a workable timeline.
  • Deep-space operations: Reaching Mars is a different credibility test than launching a payload.

XOOMAR analysis: Schmidt’s capital can buy time, talent, and patience. It cannot buy flight heritage. Rockets punish reputation-based optimism quickly.


A successful Mars flight would give Relativity a market signal no pitch deck can match

If Relativity’s NASA-backed Mars mission launches and reaches its destination, the company would gain a credential that few newer rocket companies can claim. That would not make it bigger than SpaceX. It would make it harder to dismiss.

For NASA, a successful mission would strengthen the case for using commercial providers beyond Earth orbit. For Relativity, it could support the argument that Terran R is not just another delayed rocket program. For private customers, it would show that the company can execute complex missions, not just sell future launch capacity.

The reverse is also true. After NASA’s selection, Relativity’s misses will carry more weight. A delay would not be judged as startup turbulence. It would raise questions about whether NASA pushed the commercial approach too far, too fast.

A Mars mission could hand Relativity a narrow prestige win while SpaceX remains the larger force

The likely scenario is not Relativity replacing SpaceX. The more realistic contest is narrower: can Relativity reach Mars with a NASA-backed mission before SpaceX sends its own mission there?

That is why the Relativity Space Mars mission is strategically useful. It separates Mars rhetoric from Mars delivery. SpaceX still has the stronger public association with the Red Planet, but Relativity now has a NASA selection tied to a defined scientific purpose.

The evidence to watch is concrete: Terran R development milestones, NASA updates on the mission, any confirmed schedule details, and whether Relativity starts converting the contract into broader customer confidence. If those markers hold, Schmidt’s rescue of Relativity may look less puzzling. If they slip, the Mars race will expose the gap between capital and capability.

The Stakes

  • NASA’s pick gives Relativity Space a high-profile role in Mars exploration.
  • The decision signals NASA’s interest in expanding commercial competition beyond SpaceX.
  • Better Mars data could improve future lander safety and support eventual astronaut missions.

Originally published on XOOMAR. For more news and analysis, visit XOOMAR.

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