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NASA Redefines "Space" After SpaceShipOne Flight



 
 
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  #1  
Old October 18th 04, 05:28 PM
Benign Vanilla
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Default NASA Redefines "Space" After SpaceShipOne Flight

NASA Redefines Boundary of Space After SpaceShipOne Flights

http://www.watleyreview.com/2004/100504-3.html

In an apparent fit of institutional pique following SpaceShipOne's
successful claim on the X-Prize, NASA has unexpectedly raised the
official boundary of space to 150 miles above the Earth's surface.

"Obviously, going into outer space is a major endeavor which really
ought to be left in the hands of our planet's only capable space
agency; namely us," said NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe. "We
congratulate the fine engineering which went into the production of
this novelty plane dubbed 'SpaceShipOne,' but must point out with
regret that it hasn't reached space yet by our standards."

SpaceShipOne is a privately funded, manned rocket ship powered with
laughing gas and rubber fuel built by Scaled Composites. It reached
the edge of suborbital space Monday - nearly 70 miles high - to claim
the $10 million Ansari X Prize, intended to spur private spaceflight.
However, now that NASA has raised the boundary for space, SpaceShipOne
is officially nothing more than a high-flying airplane.

"Well, let me tell you one thing: we're not giving back the prize
money," said SpaceShipOne designer Burt Rutan. "We owe Paul Allen a
lot of money, and frankly I don't want to mess with someone who's on
Bill Gates' speed-dial list." Billionaire Allen earned his fortune
with Microsoft, and reportedly invested over $20 million in the
SpaceShipOne project.

"That price tag alone should be a warning sign to people," said
O'Keefe. "Twenty million? That would barely cover the cost of the food
on a typical NASA Space Shuttle flight."

NASA has come under heavy criticism recently for continuing to invest
heavily in its aging fleet of Space Shuttles, which are notoriously
expensive to operate and have experienced serious safety problems,
including the loss of two shuttles to accidents.

"It's no coincidence that NASA set the "new" boundary of space just
below the average altitude of typical Space Shuttle flights," said
Rutan. "I would bet that, if we managed to reach an altitude of 150
miles, NASA would raise the boundary to 151."

It is unclear what effect the NASA announcement will have on the
future of SpaceShipOne, or newly-founded company Virgin Galactic's
plans to purchase a fleet of the craft to offer tourists brief visits
to what was formerly considered outer space.

"I think we're going to move ahead with the plans anyway," said Virgin
CEO Richard Branson. "I'll bet that people willing to pay $100,000 for
a 20-minute flight that brings you back to the point you left from
aren't going to be conversant with trivialities such as the legal
definition of space."


  #2  
Old October 18th 04, 06:43 PM
Jonathan Silverlight
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In message , Benign Vanilla
writes
NASA Redefines Boundary of Space After SpaceShipOne Flights

http://www.watleyreview.com/2004/100504-3.html


The last thing I really need is another bookmark, but thanks anyway :-)
  #3  
Old October 18th 04, 08:15 PM
Her One
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The last thing I really need is another bookmark, but thanks anyway :-)

yeah, what he said.

_______
Blog, or dog? Who knows. But if you see my lost pup, please ping me!
A
HREF="http://journals.aol.com/virginiaz/DreamingofLeonardo"http://journal
s.aol.com/virginiaz/DreamingofLeonardo/A

  #4  
Old October 19th 04, 01:01 AM
Tom Randy
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On Mon, 18 Oct 2004 18:43:43 +0100, Jonathan Silverlight wrote:

In message , Benign Vanilla
writes
NASA Redefines Boundary of Space After SpaceShipOne Flights

http://www.watleyreview.com/2004/100504-3.html


The last thing I really need is another bookmark, but thanks anyway :-)



This is a hoax.


  #5  
Old October 19th 04, 08:32 AM
Jonathan Silverlight
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In message , Tom Randy
writes
On Mon, 18 Oct 2004 18:43:43 +0100, Jonathan Silverlight wrote:

In message , Benign Vanilla
writes
NASA Redefines Boundary of Space After SpaceShipOne Flights

http://www.watleyreview.com/2004/100504-3.html


The last thing I really need is another bookmark, but thanks anyway :-)



This is a hoax.


I had noticed :-) I liked the story "Stealth Aircraft Show Disappoints
Crowd", too.
  #6  
Old October 19th 04, 02:04 AM
Double-A
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"Benign Vanilla" wrote in message ...
NASA Redefines Boundary of Space After SpaceShipOne Flights

http://www.watleyreview.com/2004/100504-3.html

In an apparent fit of institutional pique following SpaceShipOne's
successful claim on the X-Prize, NASA has unexpectedly raised the
official boundary of space to 150 miles above the Earth's surface.

"Obviously, going into outer space is a major endeavor which really
ought to be left in the hands of our planet's only capable space
agency; namely us," said NASA Administrator Sean O'Keefe. "We
congratulate the fine engineering which went into the production of
this novelty plane dubbed 'SpaceShipOne,' but must point out with
regret that it hasn't reached space yet by our standards."



So then I guess Alan Shepard wasn't the first American into space
after all! His 116 mile high flight never reached space by NASA's own
definition!

http://usmilitary.about.com/library/...lhistory-7.htm

I think some textbooks need to be revised!

Double-A
  #7  
Old October 19th 04, 06:26 AM
Her One
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ITYF your irony-meter needs recalibration.

Odysseus

No irony? Fine.
But I will charm you a sea,
For free.
I will charge you no fee,
If only you unravel for me this dreadful mystery ~
A endlessly swirling wine-dark memory
That billows my sails adrift,
Bears this ripened fruit I rhyme.
Yes, one charmed line
Trolls these waters for another;
Each time, to net my quarry, I cast my line
Farther out to see, re-reel my cinema of time
And again. Deeper, yes, I see,
Lovlier, too, my swirling narrative of mine
And your time ~ I dance
Our wine-driven reverie; our weather
Fine, our bedsheets perfectly ironed ~
Yes, no irony.

_______
Blog, or dog? Who knows. But if you see my lost pup, please ping me!
A
HREF="http://journals.aol.com/virginiaz/DreamingofLeonardo"http://journal
s.aol.com/virginiaz/DreamingofLeonardo/A

 




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