Jacques van Oene
October 8th 04, 10:39 AM
SpaceShipOne Captures X-Prize
On October 4, 2004, SpaceShipOne rocketed into history, becoming the first
private manned spacecraft to exceed an altitude of 328,000 feet twice within
the span of a 14 day period, thus claiming the ten million dollar Ansari
X-Prize.
A second record shattered
In addition to meeting the altitude requirement to win the X-Prize, pilot
Brian Binnie also broke the August 22, 1963 record by Joseph A. Walker, who
flew the X-15 to an unofficial world altitude record of 354,200 feet. Brian
Binnie's SpaceShipOne flight carried him all the way to 367,442 feet or 69.6
miles above the Earth's surface.
History continued
The Ansari X-Prize was founded in 1996, modeled after the Orteg Prize that
Charles Lindbergh won in 1927 by flying solo across the Atlantic Ocean.
The October 4, 2004 SpaceShipOne flight was timed partially to coincide with
the 47th anniversary of the Soviet launch of Sputnik.
--
---------------------------
Jacques :-)
www.spacepatches.info
On October 4, 2004, SpaceShipOne rocketed into history, becoming the first
private manned spacecraft to exceed an altitude of 328,000 feet twice within
the span of a 14 day period, thus claiming the ten million dollar Ansari
X-Prize.
A second record shattered
In addition to meeting the altitude requirement to win the X-Prize, pilot
Brian Binnie also broke the August 22, 1963 record by Joseph A. Walker, who
flew the X-15 to an unofficial world altitude record of 354,200 feet. Brian
Binnie's SpaceShipOne flight carried him all the way to 367,442 feet or 69.6
miles above the Earth's surface.
History continued
The Ansari X-Prize was founded in 1996, modeled after the Orteg Prize that
Charles Lindbergh won in 1927 by flying solo across the Atlantic Ocean.
The October 4, 2004 SpaceShipOne flight was timed partially to coincide with
the 47th anniversary of the Soviet launch of Sputnik.
--
---------------------------
Jacques :-)
www.spacepatches.info