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first amazon, now paypal (or is it the other way around?)

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  • first amazon, now paypal (or is it the other way around?)

    what is it with these multi-millionaire internet-businessmen and space?



    Published online: 22 March 2007; | doi:10.1038/news070319-10

    Rapid-response satellite system clears test hurdle
    Vehicle bankrolled by millionaire PayPal-founder nears success.

    Jim Giles

    When a multi-million-dollar launch vehicle burns up in the atmosphere before achieving orbit, the mission might be deemed a failure. Yet space industry experts say that the latest test run by SpaceX, a firm that aims to radically cut the cost and time needed to launch satellites, should be judged a significant success.

    The company's Falcon 1 vehicle developed a rolling motion around 6 minutes after launching from the Marshall Islands on 20 March, at which point it had reached an altitude of 300 kilometres. The motion somehow caused the craft's engines to shut down, sending it towards a fiery end as it re-entered the atmosphere and burnt up.

    The launch was watched with interest because of the way that SpaceX is shaking up the satellite-launch industry. The firm aims to be able to get its rocket ready for launch in a matter of hours. Launches usually take months of planning, but industry observers say the Falcon 1 can be turned around quickly because SpaceX has focused on using a simple design that the firm says will eventually be operated by as few as 15 staff.

    A rapid launch service would allow the US military, which paid for the test, to launch satellites at very short notice. It could then put extra surveillance capability in orbit above conflict zones, or replace satellites that had failed or been shot down.

    No cargo

    Had the vehicle been carrying a satellite destined for orbit, Tuesday's mission would have been a total failure. But as a test designed to assess the Falcon 1's critical components, it was anything but.

    Most rocket failures are caused by problems with the firing of engines and the separation of the first and second stages of the rocket, all of which passed off without problems. In a previous test conducted around a year ago, the Falcon 1 failed before separation occurred.

    "They've gone a long way towards demonstrating overall reliability," says Jeff Foust, a senior analyst at Futron, an aerospace business consultancy based in Bethesda, Maryland.

    "You don't get paid until the end product works," adds Wolfgang Demisch, an aerospace consultant based in New York, "but if you can demonstrate the launch vehicle works then you're pretty much there."

    Diagnosis

    Elon Musk, the multi-millionaire founder of the Internet service PayPal and the man behind SpaceX, says that his team is now examining data from onboard sensors to determine the cause of the engine shut-down. One possibility is that the rolling motion caused fuel to slosh away from the line that feeds the engine.


    Musk says that SpaceX engineers should have made a preliminary diagnosis by early next week. He adds that they are confident of being able to fix the problem and that the next flight, scheduled for later this year, will involve the launch of a US Department of Defense satellite.

    Small aerospace firms have traditionally had a hard time taking on the big companies that dominate the industry: Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Arianespace. But as SpaceX starts to earn confidence — enough to have generated orders for 13 launches — industry analysts say that the giants will now be looking over their shoulders.

    "Musk has a lot of money and he's determined to make it work," says Leon McKinney, an aerospace consultant based in St Louis, Missouri.

  • #2
    Private is "where it's at" in aerospace these days.

    Elon Musk's (PayPal, Tesla Motors etc.) SpaceX was first & highly regarded. They not only have military launch contracts for Falcon 1 but a contract with NASA to develop/provide a spaceship called Dragon to fly both cargo and crews to ISS using Falcon 9. They took it upon themselves to over design; it's also lunar capable. It's to fly unmanned in about a year and visit ISS a year later...5-6 years before NASA's Orion flies.

    Jeff Bezos' (Amazon.com) Blue Origin is set to fly their New Shepard (passenger spaceship named in honor of Alan Shepard) unmanned for the 2nd time this week. First test went perfectly; vertical launch, hover a second then land vertically under power.

    Then there's Bigelow's inflatable space stations. One test module up, one launching in a week or two and one big enough for a 3 man crew by 2009 or sooner. By 2011 330 cu/m modules so large just 3 would have more habitable space than the finished ISS. Their station hub could mount up to 5.

    Bigelow & some think Lockheed have a big announcement coming April 10th which he says will make people "spit their coffee". It's rumored to be a privately funded program using Lockheed's Atlas V and a new Lockheed spaceship called "CTV".

    There has also been talk of a privately funded lunar program using inflatable moon bases. Bigelow himself detailed these 2 weeks ago while Lockheed was talking about CTV & man-rating Atlas V.

    April 10th looks to be interesting.
    Last edited by Dr Mordrid; 22 March 2007, 11:51.
    Dr. Mordrid
    ----------------------------
    An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

    I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps

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