UPDATED: Story first posted at 12:20 p.m. EDT, May 13,
2004
Chalk up another booming flight of the
privately-backed SpaceShipOne, the piloted rocket plane designed to soar to the
edge of space and glide to a runway landing.
With pilot Mike Melvill at the controls -- following release
from the White Knight turbojet-powered launch aircraft high above the
Mojave, California desert -- SpaceShipOne punched through the sky today boosted
by a hybrid propellant rocket motor.
Scaled
Composites of Mojave is the builder of SpaceShipOne,
an effort led by aviation innovator, Burt Rutan. The financial backer
of the project is Microsoft mogul, Paul Allen.
In a
post-flight statement from the company, the SpaceShipOne team reported that
their space plane flew to 212,000 feet altitude, almost 41 miles. NASA
awards astronaut status to anyone who flies above 50 miles in
altitude.
"This flight marks an additional milestone for Paul
G. Allen, Burt Rutan and the innovative aerospace design team in their ongoing
efforts to complete the first non-government manned space flight. The test is
part of Scaled Composites' Tier One program, funded by Allen, Microsoft
co-founder and CEO of Vulcan Inc.," according to the statement.
Today's
flight
builds upon a progression of 13 shakeout tests, mostly un-powered drop glides
along with two engine-thrusting runs. The White Knight took off with SpaceShipOne at around 10:30 a.m. EDT today with the
rocket plane landing an the ground a little after 12
noon.
"The SpaceShipOne team will
announce the results of this test flight once it has completed an analysis of
the data," explained the Scaled Composites release, adding: "The future's
looking up...way up!"
Hot
pursuit
SpaceShipOne's first powered mission took place on
December 17, 2003, with the hybrid motor firing for 15 seconds. A second powered
flight occurred on April 8th of this year. In that trek, the motor burned for 40
seconds. A major contractor for the hybrid motor used in the rocket plane is
SpaceDev of Poway, California.
Routine recording of multiple video streams on board
White Knight and on SpaceShipOne are expected to help in pilot and engineering
evaluation of the flight.
Ecliptic Enterprises Corporation of Pasadena,
California provides the critical camera gear. They are also supplier of the
RocketCam™ line of onboard video systems used on rockets, spacecraft and other
remote platforms.
The step-by-step SpaceShipOne missions are keyed to
winning the Ansari X Prize, a $10 million purse offered by the X Prize
Foundation of St. Louis, Missouri. For the cash prize, however, the clock is
running as the $10 million purse expires January 1, 2005.
The Ansari X Prize money is to be awarded to the
first company or organization to launch a vehicle capable of carrying three
people to a height of 62.5 miles (100 kilometers), then return safely to Earth,
and repeat the flight with the same vehicle within two weeks.
Twenty-seven teams from around the globe are vying
for the Ansari X Prize contest. The competition is modeled on the $25,000 Orteig
Prize - won by Charles Lindbergh after winging his Spirit of St. Louis airplane
solo from New York to Paris in 1927.
Federal go-ahead
On April 1, the U.S. Department of Transportation
(DOT) announced it had issued to Scaled Composites the world's first license for
a sub-orbital manned rocket flight.
The license came via the DOT's Federal Aviation
Administration's Office of Commercial Space Transportation. This federal
paperwork gave Scaled Composites the go-ahead to fly a string of sub-orbital
flights for a one-year period - the first license to authorize piloted flight on
a sub-orbital trajectory.
XCOR Aerospace, also of Mojave, California, announced
in April it had received a Reusable Launch Vehicle mission license from the
FAA's Office of Commercial Space Transportation. That license is the first for a
reusable launch vehicle (RLV) that is launched and recovered from the ground.
Additionally, XCOR is now authorized to test RLV technologies prior to
suborbital passenger travel. The company is not in the competition for the
Ansari X Prize.
XCOR's launch license is for a technology test
vehicle. The license does not yet cover passenger operations. It does, however,
permit revenue-generating payload flights after initial tests are completed. "A
significant feature of the license is that it allows the pilot to do an
incremental series of flight tests -- without preplanning each trajectory," said
XCOR Government Liaison Randall Clague in a press statement.
Mojave mojo
Given all the rocket plane activity at the Mojave
Airport, steps have been taken to have the facility certified as a
spaceport.
Stuart Witt, General Manager of the Mojave Airport,
envisions the site busily handling the horizontal launchings and landings of
reusable spacecraft.
Witt said the FAA's Office of Commercial Space
Transportation is reviewing an application to license Mojave Airport as an
inland spaceport. In fact, the airport is already a natural center for research
and development and certification programs, such as the rocket plane work of
Scaled Composites and XCOR Aerospace.
Many see Mojave Airport as a magical nexus for safe,
smooth coordination of general aviation activity and private aerospace
development.
Mojave Airport, also tagged the nation's Civilian
Flight Test Center, is situated away from major metropolitan areas, while being
located near Edwards and China Lake military test ranges.
"Certainly
Mojave is a premier location due to its proximity to the Edwards Air Force Base
restricted areas," Burt Rutan told SPACE.com
.
Adds Aleta Jackson, an XCOR Aerospace executive:
"We look forward to flying our licensed spacecraft from the Mojave Spaceport."
The town of Mojave -- as well as the County of Kern -- plan to help support the
spaceport, such as designating land use that is compatible with an active
spaceport, she said.