GOLDEN, Colorado This year's
Wirefly X Prize Cup is shaping up to become a unique rocket festival that
salutes forward-looking technology, space exploration and education, while
showcasing a contest between private sector lunar lander vehicle designs.
The Wirefly X PRIZE CUP '07 Holloman
Air and Space Expo is being held October 27-28, staged at the Holloman
Air Force Base in the city of Alamogordo, New Mexico.
"It'll be a cool show,"
said Bretton Alexander, Executive Director of Space Prizes and the Wirefly X
Prize Cup in Washington, D.C. "There won't be as much down time, if you
will, that there has been in the past. It will be far more dynamic," he
said, noting that the event will involve more performances, presentations and
displays than ever before.
In the past two years, X Prize Cup
activities were held in Las Cruces, New Mexico. This year's larger venue covers
some 30 acres with ground displays featuring spaceships, U.S. Air Force aircraft,
robots and rovers, along with Jumbotrons to enable those attending to keep an
eye on all the action.
Personal spaceflight: next major
milestone
In many ways, the annual Wirefly X
Prize Cup provides a status check on the blossoming variety of private space
travel ventures. As example, prior to the expo, the Third International
Symposium for Personal Spaceflight will take place October 24-25 at the New
Mexico Farm and Ranch Heritage Museum in neighboring Las Cruces, New Mexico.
"The personal spaceflight
industry is alive and well. We continue to have significant and growing private
investment," said Peter
Diamandis, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the X Prize Foundation,
headquartered in Santa Monica, California.
The personal spaceflight industry
now embraces numbers of new systems in development, Diamandis told SPACE.com,
from the passenger-carrying SpaceShipTwo suborbital spaceliner now being built,
the prototype Bigelow Aerospace expandable modules now in Earth orbit, to the
Falcon 9 rocket and reusable, crew-carrying Dragon orbital capsule of Space
Exploration Technologies Corporation.
Diamandis said that the next major
milestone is the routine commercial operations of these new systems leading up
to the first successful Initial Public Offering, or IPO.
"Once one of these commercial
space companies conducts a vibrant IPO I think we'll have what I've been
calling a 'Netscape event' where in investors will stand up and take notice and
capital will begin to flow into the pre-IPO space companies," Diamandis
predicted.
Free event
The Wirefly X Prize Cup and Holloman
Air and Space Expo will be a free event, Alexander said, with ground and static
display areas spotlighting private, industrial, as well as NASA hardware. Seven
hours each day consists of live rocket competitions, launches, and air show
performances, he said.
"We are going to be displaying
our Nova rocket this year, in collaboration with Doña Ana Community College
(DACC), a branch of New Mexico State University," said Steve Bennett, head
of Starchaser
Industries. The Nova/Starchaser 4 is a single-seater rocket is some 37 feet
(11 meters) tall sure to be an eye-catcher at the expo.
The UK-based Starchaser Industries
Limited is currently working on larger versions of this rocket that will be
used for space tourism purposes. Furthermore, the company's New Mexico
development at Starchaser Rocket City is progressing well. A twenty thousand
gallon water storage facility will be installed close by, which will allow the
construction of Starchaser's 10,000 square foot rocket manufacturing and
assembly building.
On October 26, thousands of students
from schools from across the United States will attend the Wirefly X Prize Cup
education day at Holloman Air Force Base for rocket launches, astronaut
sessions, career panels, and competitions, Alexander said.
Another student-outreach initiative
is the Pete Conrad Spirit of Innovation Award, asking high school-aged students
to develop a new, innovative concept to benefit the personal spaceflight industry
within the next 50 years. The award is named after Conrad, the late astronaut
who flew Gemini and Skylab missions, and commanded the Apollo 12 landing on the
Moon.
Prizes on the line
A major expo attraction will be the
Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander Challenge. The event involves rocket teams vying
for $2 million in prize money, flying their respective lunar lander ships
through the sky to touchdowns on simulated lunar surface landscape under time
constraints.
NASA, which signed a Space Act
Agreement with the X Prize Foundation before last year's competition will once
again fund the prizes through the space agency's Centennial Challenges program
an effort that promotes technical innovation through prize competitions.
This year's Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander
Challenge is shaping up well, said William Pomerantz, Director of Space
Projects for the X Prize Foundation in Washington, D.C. Rocketeers will
demonstrate the ups and downs of carrying out simulated lunar lander flights
with the $2 million in prizes on the line, he said.
"All told, our teams have spent
about 35,000 man-hours, almost all of them volunteered, working on this challenge
thus far," Pomerantz added. "And what a great investment for
NASA...they've gotten 35,000 man-hours and countless innovations and solutions,
and haven't spent a single dollar thus far," he emphasized.
Sensory overload
Major emphasis is being placed on
safe flight of rocket-powered craft taking part in the Northrop Lunar Lander
Challenge, said Lt. Col. Angelo Eiland, 49th Fighter Wing Deputy Director of
Staff at Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico.
On tap is an integration of rules
from the Federal Aviation Administration's Office of Commercial Space
Transportation, the National Transportation Safety Board, X Prize, as well as
Holloman safety regulations that govern operations on the base, Eiland noted.
Rocket teams taking part in the
Challenge that do not fully meet the necessary free-flight requirements prior
to the Air and Space Expo may be required to do tethered launches, Eiland
said.
"The opportunity to partner
with X Prize helps round out the picture of telling the air and space
revolutions that have taken place over the last 50 and 60 years," Eiland
told SPACE.com. Given the melding of top aviation and private space
innovation, he added that the upcoming two-day Holloman Air and Space Expo
could see an audience of 100,000 people flooding through base gates.
The schedule of events is tightly
packed, alternating between space and rocket activities to aircraft takeoffs,
flyovers, and landings. Slated for public viewing are mission-ready F-117A
Stealth Fighters, for example, and the F22-Raptor.
"I think it's going to present
sensory overload," Eiland explained. "The biggest challenge that I
see, logistically, is just giving people a break so they can use the restroom
or have a meal."
For detailed information and updates
regarding the 2007 Wirefly X Prize Cup, go to the Internet web site: http://space.xprize.org/x-prize-cup/