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[I'm kind of surprised this hasn't been posted about already, so
something I wrote yesterday to here.] This is a very exciting week for private spaceflight! In addition to the Virgin Galactic announcement, hotel entrepreneur Robert Bigelow (of Bigelow Aerospace) has mentioned plans to announce a $50 million orbital space prize, to a team which produces a commercial space transport capable of sending 5-7 passengers to a Bigelow inflatable space module by 2010. This will be dubbed "America's Space Prize." There's an article with photographs available he http://spaceflightnow.com/news/n0409/27bigelow/ press release: http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/040927/nym082_1.html The inflatables themselves are quite interesting, with a docking mechanism designed to attach with either a Russian Soyuz, a Chinese Shenzhou, and/or whatever vehicle comes out of the aforementioned America's Space Prize. A one-third size prototype of the inflatable module will be launched in 2005 on the maiden flight of SpaceX's Falcon V rocket, which is itself a very interesting vehicle (~3000kg into LEO for $12 million, and the first orbital vehicle designed to be man-rated since the space shuttle). The first full-size inflatable habitat will be up by 2008, and it's planned to have a crew by 2010. Robert Bigelow was also the founder of Budget Suites of America, and is applying a lot of the cost-cutting tricks he learned from his previous contracting experience to the aerospace industry. He licensed the Transhab technology from NASA (which had previously had its funding cut), and is subcontracting for things like life support from other companies who already have systems running. What's exciting about this is that the inflatable modules appear to be designed, built, and have undergone some preliminary tests. The outsides of the modules have withstood projectile impact tests fairly well. Pretty much all that needs to happen now is for them to undergo further tests and be launched. Bigelow's use of multiple contractors for the same part will allow him to ramp up production if there's a demand for it, and sell the inflatable modules for ~$100 million each to whoever wants them. Regarding the prize itself, I'd actually be quite interested to see if somebody ends up just designing a docking/descent capsule and sticking it on a Falcon V. |
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