UPDATE: Story first posted
2:08 p.m. EDT, July 27, 2004
They're off and running!
A piloted rocket ship race to claim a $10 million Ansari X Prize purse for
privately financed flight to the edge of space is heating up.
Aerospace engineer, Burt Rutan, leader of Scaled Composites of Mojave,
California, has formally announced a timetable for back-to-back flights of the
firm's SpaceShipOne rocket plane.
Rutan and his team have given its official 60-day notice, with the first X
Prize attempt set for September 29 from the inland Mojave Spaceport in
California. To win the $10 million, SpaceShipOne will need to make a second
flight within two weeks, by October 13.
Hot on Rutan's heels is Brian Feeney, leader of the Canadian da Vinci
Project. Feeney also reported today that his team is rolling out on August 5
their completed X Prize vehicle -- the balloon-lofted Wild Fire rocket. The
public unveiling will take place at the team's Downsview Airport hanger in
Toronto.
The da Vinci Project Team, widely heralded as a contender for the $10 million
purse, will pursue its own Ansari X Prize space flight attempts this
Fall.
Crack shots
The announcements were made at an X Prize Foundation press briefing, held
today at the Santa Monica Airport in Santa Monica, California.
"These teams with their different approaches show real
out-of-the-box thinking," said Peter Diamandis, chairman and chief executive
officer of the X Prize Foundation, based in St. Louis, Missouri. "That's what
the Ansari X Prize is doing...allowing people to innovate and learn how to
operate a new class of vehicle," he told SPACE.com
.
In order to win the Ansari X Prize, teams must build a safe and reusable
space vehicle built to carry one pilot and the weight equivalent of two
passengers 62 miles (100 kilometers) into suborbital space. The vehicle must be
privately financed and safely launched twice within a two-week period. The first
registered Ansari X Prize team to complete this feat will win the $10 million
prize and a trophy.
Fuel and go
"We're not seeing any breakthroughs in physics or materials science here,"
Diamandis said. We've gotten it down to a point where a small group of people
can do this routinely over and over again...fuel and go."
Diamandis said that low-cost aviation comes from the robustness of the
systems. The experience gained from repeatedly flying aircraft of all shapes and
sizes has spurred into being a huge industry.
"And that's what we need to do in the space world to get to that point,"
Diamandis said. "It's the cost of operations that makes the space shuttle cost
three-quarters of a billion dollars per launch. Fuel is one percent of the cost.
It's the operations that we have to work on," he added.
Sky-to-space trek
The Scaled Composites' SpaceShipOne scored a major milestone June 21 at the
Mojave Spaceport, becoming the first private piloted vehicle to streak out
beyond the Earth's atmosphere.
Test pilot Mike Melvill flew the rocket ship to 328,491 feet (approximately
62 miles or 100 km). That sky-to-space trek allowed Melvill to become the first
civilian to fly a privately-backed spaceship out of the atmosphere and the first
private pilot to earn astronaut wings.
The June 21 flight was not without incident. Astronaut Melvill's expert
piloting skills came into play as SpaceShipOne experienced a flight control
malfunction. The vehicle did not climb as high as planned. Furthermore, the
air-launched rocket plane reentered south of the intended recovery point. While
not in the flight plan, this suborbital trajectory excursion was well within the
vehicle's glide capability, with SpaceShipOne winging back to a normal landing
at the Mojave Spaceport.
At a post-announcement telephone press briefing today, Rutan said there will
be no shakeout missions of SpaceShipOne prior to shooting for the Ansari X
Prize.
For the upcoming flights, Rutan said the rocket plane will be lightened by
removing some of the onboard hardware. Also, the vehicle's hybrid rocket motor
will be augmented, he said.
"We're working on both increasing the impulse of the motor as well as working
on our ability to fly a more precise trajectory," Rutan told reporters.
The heat is on
The offer of a $10 million Ansari X Prize expires as of January 1, 2005. So
the heat is on among an international cadre of rocket-to-space groups. More than
20 teams from seven countries have registered to compete for the Ansari X Prize.
The approaches taken to snag the purse are as varied as the number of
contestants. For example, the SpaceShipOne Project is backed by billionaire Paul
G. Allen, in the range of $20 million to $25 million.
Meanwhile, the Toronto-based da Vinci Project is billed by the group as the
largest all-volunteer technology project in Canadian history with some 100,000
people-hours already spent on the project thus far.
SpaceShipOne is toted into the air underneath the White Knight carrier plane.
From there, it is released to speed toward space under power of a hybrid rocket
motor. The da Vinci effort utilizes the world's largest reusable helium balloon
to haul the piloted Wild Fire rocket to an altitude of 80,000 feet (24,400
meters). From that sky-high point, the liquid oxygen/kerosene-fueled rocket
ignites for the trip to the edge of space.
Definitely in the hunt
Feeney said the da Vinci Project has taken 8 years of dedication by more than
600 people. "We are going to roll out Canada's first private manned spacecraft
and only the second private manned spacecraft in history. This is still history
unfolding," he stated at the press briefing.
"Our goal is to compete for and win the X Prize. We are definitely in the
hunt and we're contending for it," Feeney said.
Feeney said that roughly $337,000 dollars in cash has gone into the
balloon/rocket project, along with some $10 million to $15 million dollars worth
of time donated by people, as well as help from in-kind sponsors.
All the way to orbit
For the da Vinci Project to take to the air however, more funds are
necessary.
"We need Canada's Paul G. Allen or equivalent to step forward with less than
one-half million dollars," Feeney explained.
And what if SpaceShipOne beats the da Vinci effort, grabbing the $10
million?
"We will definitely fly. It's important to the project that this happens,"
Feeney responded. He said that their team is moving forward with an 8-person,
air-launched rocket design.
A long-range goal, Feeney added, is to continue pioneering all the way to
orbit. "It's time to give up near Earth space to the private sector and make it
happen...and we're going to be a part of that."
Gold Box
Also at today's press briefing was Colonel Rick Searfoss, pilot and commander
of three space shuttle missions. He's the Chief Judge of the Ansari X Prize.
Searfoss said the judging team has been working with Scaled Composites for
the last several months to gauge their technologies onboard and instrumentation
available to clearly validate that Ansari X Prize rules will be met.
An X Prize "gold box" will carry specific instrumentation, Searfoss said. The
objective is to make sure "there's no question in anybody's mind that when the
data comes in...it is a thumb's up or a thumb's down."
Can-do, home-brew
Paul Allen, sole investor of SpaceShipOne and partner in Mojave Aerospace
Ventures, LLC, said in a press statement released today:
"This competition has proven that there are many different ways to attack the
challenges set out by the Ansari X Prize. From the start we have approached
SpaceShipOne with a 'can-do, home-brew' attitude," Allen said. "We are grateful
that our previous flights have brought even more attention to the Ansari X Prize
and given more momentum to the groundswell of excitement that is continuing to
build for the long-term potential of affordable space exploration."
"In one sense, the X Prize has already succeeded," Diamandis said. "We've
sparked a diverse set of vehicles that are being tested and built. Secondly,
we've got people excited about this market place."
As the competition speeds up into high gear, Diamandis said there are several
additional sponsorships still available for the Ansari X Prize competition.
Corporations or individuals wishing to support the contest and associate
themselves with courage, determination, achievement, space, speed, high
performance and technology are more than welcome to step forward, Diamandis
concluded.
Image Galleries: