LAS
CRUCES, New Mexico -- The next generation of human spaceflight is no longer the
sole province of governments. Private spaceships transporting passengers first
to the edge of space--and ultimately into orbit--are in various stages of design,
construction and testing.
What's
more, there is an air of competition between rival camps of rocketeers. They
foresee big business as patrons dig deep in their wallets to shoot for the sky.
Last
year's trio of suborbital flights by SpaceShipOne
verified that the technological resources to build safe, affordable vehicles is
at hand. Multiple spaceports spread around the country, and perhaps the world,
may well handle outgoing and incoming spaceliners. Point-to-point suborbital
space hops could permit super express delivery of payloads and passengers. And
why not a five-star spa in Earth orbit?
Entrepreneurial
rocketeers, government leaders, spaceport developers, economic and tourism
experts took part in the First
International Symposium on Personal Spaceflight, held here October 6 and presented
by the X Prize Foundation and New Mexico State University (NMSU). The symposium
was sponsored by Arianespace-USA.
The
X Prize Foundation has formed a partnership with the state of New Mexico to
host the annual X
Prize Cup and to assist in building the Southwest Regional Spaceport in
Upham, New Mexico. This year's activity is called the Countdown to the X Prize
Cup.
"We
are entering an age where the economics and drivers of spaceflight will help
bring the prices down many fold, with reliability up. That will unleash the
resources of space to the people of Earth...and that's our goal," said Peter
Diamandis, Chairman of the X Prize Foundation.
Exciting sector
One
buzz of curiosity at the one-day gathering dealt with the symposium sponsor,
Europe's Arianespace, the commercial rocket-for-hire group created in 1980.
The
series of SpaceShipOne suborbital flights last year was a thrill heard around
the world, said Clayton Mowry, President, of Arianespace's U.S. affiliate. "We
see something here. We're not sure exactly how we play in this space yet. We're
here to learn...to see what's going on. We feel the excitement and we want to see
if there's a way that we can work in this exciting sector," he told SPACE.com.
"The excitement is contagious."
Mowry
said that Arianespace has strengths in sales and marketing, contracts, as well
as integration and operation. "A lot of these little companies could use
someone with that kind of experience," he said.
Arianespace is a well-known name,
particularly in Europe - a symbol of European success in space, Mowry said. "In
fact, if you were to market commercial space services, and you wanted a firm in
Europe that could market that service for you in Europe...it would certainly be a
natural for us," he added.
Hardware on the floor
Among
those detailing their future suborbital plans was Chuck Lauer, Vice President
of Business Development for Rocketplane, Inc., headquartered in Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma.
"There's
hardware on the floor...all kinds of engineering going on," Lauer told the
audience. Rollout of their suborbital Rocketplane XP is slated for fall 2006,
with the craft to be present and accounted for at the X Prize Cup to be held
here next year.
At
the end of 2006, early 2007, "our intention is to be minting lots of civilian
astronaut wings for everybody that's climbing into our vehicle," Lauer said. He
suggested that a large market making use of the same suborbital technology now
being developed is point-to-point delivery of people and cargo - one-hour hops
to anywhere on the planet.
Lauer
chided NASA for its spending of taxpayer dollars, at the expense of supporting
private spaceflight operators.
"The
government needs to figure out how to be a smart customer rather than a
competitor to the entrepreneurial industry," Lauer said. "Why in the world does
the government have to spend tens of billions of dollars creating dedicated
government systems to do what the private sector can, should, and wants to do?"
Second prize race
"We're
in the business of selling incredible views," said Brian Feeney, team leader of
the Toronto, Canada-based Golden Palace.com Space Program, powered by the da
Vinci Project.
Feeney's
effort was once in the running to win the $10 million Ansari X Prize, as were a
number of groups around the world. That purse was won last year by Burt Rutan
and his team at Scaled Composites in Mojave, California that built
SpaceShipOne, bankrolled by Microsoft mogul, Paul Allen.
Feeney
and his team have worked for over nine years developing their balloon-assisted
suborbital rocket plans. "We've got the real testing behind us," he said, but
added that still more evaluations of the hardware are spread out over the next
six months - leading to flight by the end of 2006.
There
was also a blush of unofficial competition between groups vying to get their
suborbital designs into the air next. The drum beat to become the second effort
to fly a private craft to the edge of space is clearly getting louder.
"I
think there's a bit of a second prize race developing among some of the teams,"
Feeney suggested.
So much vision
Jeff
Greason, President of XCOR Aerospace of Mojave, California, said they continue
to work on their Xerus suborbital rocket plane, providing a cryptic update:
"That program is underway and that's about all I can say about that at this
time."
XCOR
is also turning their attention to the recently announced Rocket
Racing League, featuring X-Racer planes based on the company's EZ-Rocket
design.
Greason
said there are numerous challenges ahead for private spaceflight groups.
"We
don't know how to make spaceships that fly a couple of times a day, every day
for years," Greason told the audience. How to start making a profit also
remains elusive, he said, "but we think we've got some pretty good ideas how to
solve them."
"We've
got so much vision," Greason said. "Vision is the one thing that's not been in
short supply. We're short of everything else," he concluded.
Virgin Galactic: order is in
Clearly
off to a roaring start in the space tourism business is that of Virgin
Galactic. The company was formed by British entrepreneur, Richard Branson,
to handle space tourist flights. He has linked up with aerospace designer, Burt
Rutan of Scaled Composites, forming a new aerospace production company--The Spaceship
Company. That entity will build a fleet of commercial suborbital spaceships
and launch aircraft.
The
order is in for the first five spaceships, with an option on the next five,
said Alex Tai, Vice President of Operations for Virgin Galactic. "We'll be
operating in front of everyone else for at least two years or so," Tai
predicted.
Tai
said that Virgin Galactic is happy with the deal struck with Rutan, but added:
"We want to make sure that people realize that we're not just married to Burt
Rutan technology," he told SPACE.com.
"We
want to select the best technology for spaceflight participants of the future. We're
not wedded just to Burt," Tai said. "We're very supportive of all the things
that everyone else is doing. I've been talking to a lot of different people and
told Burt that he had better stay on his toes. There's some really cool stuff
out there that's going on," Tai explained.
Major motivator
Space
tourism is happening, declared Priscilla Bloomquist, Associate Professor of
Hotel, Restaurant and Tourism Management at NMSU. She admitted that for many in
her field, public space travel has been viewed as something off into the far
future. "But the reality is that it's a reality."
However,
Bloomquist did flag the fact that the personal spaceflight industry is driven
heavily by the space side of the equation. "There needs to be more buy-in from
the tourism side of the table," she said. Underscoring the fact that a space
tourist is in it for the experience, those in the personal spaceflight
business, she suggested, must be cognizant that this new industry should be
"guest driven."
"Clearly
price is a big issue," Bloomquist noted. Windows for viewing, a free-floating
experience versus being strapped down tight, duration of the journey, and level
of flight preparation - all these factors and others, she added, will influence
whether or not people are going to put down good money to sail spaceward.
"Bragging
rights," garnered by those public space travelers "is nothing new to the
tourist industry. Status and prestige is a major motivator," Bloomquist
advised.
The
emergence of Virgin Galactic as a spaceline operator, Bloomquist said, should
help shore up public confidence in space tourism. "There is a major trust
factor that they bring to the table," she said.
Education and economic impact
The growth of personal spaceflight and the promise of the state's Southwest
Regional Spaceport becoming reality just outside Las Cruces is all good news,
said Patricia Hynes, co-chair of the symposium. She is also director of the New
Mexico Space Grant Consortium at NMSU.
Talk
of a New Mexico spaceport has been on-going since 1992, Hynes said. "I've been
involved in the spaceport because, in my mind, it was never a matter of if...it
was when?"
Hynes
said access to space through the local spaceport will help stimulate the needed
workforce for next generation spaceflight. Hands-on student space projects are
central to preparing that workforce, she said, running tandem with "a higher
and more consistent commitment to better teaching in the university," she said.
Along
with an educational impact, spaceports bring industry, jobs, and they become
centers of economic activity, said Paula Trimble, a space transportation
industry analyst in the Office of Commercial Space Transportation at the
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) in Washington, D.C.
Trimble
noted that New Mexico's Southwest Regional Spaceport plans to have a number of
structures at the complex, and continues to move toward gaining an FAA
spaceport license. The site could handle suborbital flights, equatorial and
polar orbit launchings, as well as conduct servicing runs to the International
Space Station, she said.
First steps
A
draft of the Environmental Impact Statement for the Southwest Regional
Spaceport is nearly complete, said Rick Homans, Spaceport Authority Chairman
and New Mexico Economic Development Department Secretary. A spaceport
groundbreaking is to occur later this year, he said.
The
X Prize Cup activities and movement on the spaceport has received the backing
of New Mexico's Governor, Bill Richardson.
Homans
told SPACE.com that the importance of this year's Countdown to the X
Prize Cup is to "give this emerging industry a place and a venue to show itself
off to the world. It's clearly an industry that is not completely formed...but this
is historic. These are the first steps of this industry coming together," he
said.
"We're
hoping that the industry and the world begin to view New Mexico as the home of
the next generation of space travel. That's the brand...the image that we want
and why we got involved with the X Prize Cup," Homans said. "It's about
increased access and affordability when it comes to getting to space. We see
these entrepreneurs headed in the same direction. They are heading up."
As
the symposium closed, attention turned to the next Countdown to the X Prize Cup
events: An educational and public activities held October 7-8 at the New Mexico
Museum of Space History in Alamogordo, and the October 9th Personal
Spaceflight Expo at the Las Cruces International Airport.
Full
details and e-tickets are available at: www.xprize.org