Commercial Spaceflight for the Rest of Us: Congratulations to Virgin Galactic


By Peter H. Diamandis
Chairman/CEO, X PRIZE Foundation

Today Virgin Galactic and Scaled Composites will roll out SpaceShipTwo (SS2) a commercial passenger carrying spaceship derived from the winning ship which captured the $10M Ansari X PRIZE for spaceflight in 2004. While SpaceShipOne (SS1) carried only one pilot and two passengers, the much larger SS2 will be flown by two pilots with seats for six paying passengers.

Five years ago, 20,000 people gathered at the Mojave Air & Space Port to watch as Burt Rutan and his team at Scaled Composites, backed by Paul Allen, accomplished what many considered impossible – building and flying a privately funded, privately piloted spaceship, twice, to altitudes above 100 kilometers. On that fateful day, October 4th, when the ship successfully flew its second flight into space, it carried on it the Virgin Logo and a pledge from Richard Branson to fund a commercial version to carry the paying public into space. Well, here we are. The commercial version is now built and will soon start test flights. While the project is a few years behind schedule, it has made incredible strides. Branson and Will Whitehorn (the CEO of Virgin Galactic) have committed hundreds of millions of dollars to get it to this point and everyone is the space community is very thankful.



Equally of note to the hardware rollout, is the confirmation of the marketplace. Tens of thousands of people have gone online to register for a future seat, and some 250 of them have put down the full $200,000 deposit to be amongst the first to fly.

A new era of private spaceflight is unfolding in a very similar fashion to the early days of aviation. In the decades following the Wright Brothers, “tourism flights” were the primary mechanism by which those early aeronauts earned their living. Barn-storming, as it was called, offered an individual the opportunity to pay a handsome sum (typically a month’s wages) to fly to the death-defying altitude of 5,000 feet from which he/she could view their town from the air. Soon, barnstorming gave way to real aviation businesses such as airmail and passenger point-to-point carriage.

In the same fashion, a number of commercial providers, in addition to Virgin Galactic, will offer space tourism flights in the years ahead. These flights will then be followed by flights carrying scientific experiments and flights conducting astronaut training.

So who else is building vehicles and selling seats? First it should be noted that Space Adventures has been carrying privately paying passengers to orbit, to the International Space Station, for the past 9 years using the Russian Soyuz (Disclosure: I am a co-Founder and Managing Director of Space Adventures). Space Adventures has also sold over 100 seats for future suborbital flights at a ticket price of $98,000. In addition to Virgin Galactic and Space Adventures, three other companies fit prominently in this era of private spaceflight. John Carmack, CEO of Armadillo Aerospace and creator of the video games ‘Quake’ & ‘Doom’ is developing a passenger carrying suborbital vertical take-off/landing ship. His vehicle is a derivative of the ship which was one of the two winners in the Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander X PRIZE Challenge (Masten Space Systems was the other winner). In addition, Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon.com has started a space exploration company called Blue Origin which has been cloaked in secrecy for the past 5 years. “Blue” as it’s called, is focusing on a variety of human carrying designs, the first of which is a vertical take-off, vertical landing sub-orbital ship. Blue is also rumored to be working on orbital flight as well. The third prominent player is SpaceX, founded by PayPal Founder, Elon Musk. SpaceX is developing orbital passenger carrying capability using the Dragon Capsule, which will fly about the Falcon-9 booster to orbit carrying future Astronauts to the International Space Station for NASA. The first test flight of Dragon/Falcon-9 is scheduled for February 2010.

How cheap could a seat get? First we need to distinguish between sub-orbital and orbital flights. Getting to orbit (i.e. going completely around planet Earth in a 90-minute orbit) is approximately 50-times harder than just going up into space and back down to the Earth on a suborbital flight. Today, Virgin Galactic (a suborbital provider) is selling seats at $200,000. Neither Armadillo or Blue Origin have announced seat prices. But theoretically, in my opinion, we could likely see the price per seat for sub-orbital flights drop rapidly over the next decade to under $50,000 per person. In the orbital world, today, Space Adventures offers a seat to orbit aboard the Russian Soyuz for about $45M+. The first orbital passenger, Dennis Tito, spent $20M and the latest Space Adventures customer, Guy Laliberte, paid in excess of $40M. If all goes well, in the decades ahead, I hope we’ll see the price return to $20M and eventually to a price under $5M per person.

I’d like to also point out how magical it is that SS1 and SS2 are being designed and built by a small group of designers enabled by incredible technology. While it once took the wealth and resources of a nation to fly into space, it is now possible for a smart and dedicated team to build such technology. In the case of SpaceShipTwo, special recognition to Burt Rutan, Scaled CEO, Doug Shane, Scaled designers, Jim Tighe, Bob Morgan, Matt Stinemetze, and Marc Zeitlin and Scaled Flight Test Operations Chief, Pete Siebold.

Ultimately, it’s easy to dream and talk about spaceflight, but it comes down to those who put up their wealth, reputations and time. It is for this reason that today I praise Richard Branson, Will Whitehorn, Burt Rutan, Paul Allen and the Ansari Family for their role in SpaceShipOne and SpaceShipTwo. We all share a mutual desire and vision to enable the day when tens of thousands of people will be traveling beyond the Earth on a regular basis.

So, congratulations to the Virgin and Scaled teams for today’s success. I wish you the best of luck in the months ahead as SpaceShipTwo enters into its test flight, and look forward to its first commercial flight in the near future.

Space Access '010 - Initial Conference Information

Initial 2010 Space Access '010 Conference Info, 12/03/09. - Space Access Society:

The conference will be held from Thursday, April 8 (afternoon) to Saturday April 10 (evening) in Phoenix. See the link for more details. In the past this has been a good conference for updates on the Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander Challenge, N-Prize, and Beam Power competition, among others. The focus is on low-cost suborbital and orbital access to space, with an emphasis on commercial space, entrepreneurs, and small dedicated groups. Government agencies that deal with space are also represented, but most frequently through their interactions with commercial space access efforts. See the link for more details.

Here's a summary of Space Access '09 (with links to summaries for many earlier years).

Prize Roundup: Red Balloons, Patches, Elevator Conference, Google Earth Town Models, Mars Pathfinder Innovation, More

Eurospaceward Space Elevator / Lunar Industrialization Conference

@SEGames I'm here at the 2009 EuroSpaceward conference. Among other topics, we'll get an update on the US and Japanese Space Elevator Games.

@SEGames Jordin Kare (from LaserMotive) and Martin Lades (from KC Space Pirates) are here and will also speak.

@SEGames I'm live-blogging the conference at http://www.spaceelevatorblog.com/

There's a lot more from SEGames twitter - the tweet from a couple minutes ago says Jordin Kare is speaking now. I don't have a hash tag for the conference, but SEGames, Eurospaceward, Ben Shelef, and some of the teams are at my Space Elevator Games Twitter List.

EuroSpaceward Conference - and the future of Space Elevator Development - The Space Elevator Blog

In Luxembourg… - The Space Elevator Blog:

... I’ve been chosen to judge a coloring contest - “How do you Imagine Life on the Moon?” - an event held as part of the EuroSpaceward conference. ...

Conference - Day 1 - and we’re underway - The Space Elevator Blog

As with the SEGames twitter, I've just selected a few of many posts. Check out The Space Elevator Blog for more.

Update: I should mention that the third part of the program (PDF) includes 4 Google Lunar X PRIZE teams!

DARPA Network Challenge (Red Balloons)

@ikluft about 2000 people registered for #DARPA #NetworkChallenge - don't forget to have fun! http://stratofox.org/redballoon

@ikluft I made a Twitter list of #DARPA #NetworkChallenge participants that I know of (41 so far) http://is.gd/5cUvW

Update on DARPA Network Challenge: @ikluft Congratulations to MIT Red Balloon Challenge Team for winning. We had 5 right 2 wrong #DARPA #NetworkChallenge

@ikluft updated Stratofox's #NetworkChallenge page: added "How we did" section, credits http://stratofox.org/redballoon #DARPA

N-Prize

@TeamPrometheus 2 Tiny Satellites just arrived at the Rocket Ranch! Photo's tomorrow! http://bit.ly/8lo1ij

More Prizes and Competitions

Model Your Town - Google Earth Blog:

Google has just announced their first-ever "Model Your Town" Competition.

The goal is to get smaller cities to work on building their town in 3D. While every town will likely see their models in Google Earth, the winning town will win $10,000 for its schools, a Google-sponsored party, a video profile of the winning team and some other goodies. ...

See the Google Earth Blog link for a video with some examples of town models in Google Earth.

SGAC together with the UN-SPIDER have designated a winner of the “Disaster Management in the Caribbean” poster competition - Space Generation Advisory Council

NASA Student Launch - Space for All

NASA Moon Work Design Contest - Space for All

@collectSPACE Picking a patch for the program: NASA's employee contest to design a patch for the end of the space shuttle program... http://bit.ly/7iaiO4

Mission to Mars and Red Planet make John Scalzi’s list of worst SF films of decade - Marooned: Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror books on Mars - From the Scalzi piece:

The year 2000 saw two competing Mars flicks, which struggled fiercely for the title of Most Likely to Set Back Manned Exploration of Mars by 50 Years. ...

Sci-Fri: NASA and Microsoft launch Martian website, use crowdsourcing to map Red Planet - Marooned: Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror books on Mars - The Be a Martian! site includes the 2009 Pathfinder Innovation Challenge. Here are the contest rules (PDF). I couldn't figure out specifically what the various categories of contestants were meant to do from the rules, but the Participation Guide (PDF) explains it. Here's the summary:

... The Inspiration League invites Entrants 14 years and older to develop an episode for "The Martians" video series. Join the Scholarship League if you're over 14 and would like to build a compelling and exciting interactive web application for students and the rest of the world to learn about rocks on Earth and Mars. Entrants over age 18 in the Global Cooperation League will develop fun web games that crowd-source the task of finding and labeling interesting objects in an enormous set of images acquired by the Mars rovers. The Intelligence League challenges Entrants over age 18 to accomplish the same task with autonomous applications that can rapidly detect and label these interesting objects.

#FFD: The GLXP Gift Guide for Geeks

Hello, GLXP Friday fans!

Well, I'm not sure how it happened, but here we are already at the first Friday of December. With the holidays just a few weeks away, we thought it would be fun to compile some gift ideas for space geeks. There are some other sites doing this as well ("Pick your Geek Gift" at msnbc is a good one), but we wanted to add a few more ideas to the mix.

So, what would all of you good space cadets/cadettes like for Christmas this year?

We've kick-started a gift list below, but we need more great ideas from you! Books, toys, collectibles, or anything else that a space geek might desire (bonus points if it's lunar-related!). Send us links to other great gifts that you know of, and we'll add them to this post.

Here's the list so far:

1. *Free* Hubble Holiday Cards

Give the gift of Galactic joy with these free Christmas Hubble cards. They are pre-designed and sized, so all you need to do it print and send. Lots of starry designs to choose from -- here are a couple of my favorites:




2. The "Office Space" Shirt

Complete with red stapler.




3. Geeky wrapping paper

You'll need something to wrap up your geeky gifts. ThinkGeek has the solution! The Christmasbots paper is fantastic.



4. Space Monkey Benders

What's more fun than a barrel of monkeys? A rocket full of them, obviously.




5. Shuttle Ornament

Made of sugar and spice, and space blanket material?



6. A retro rocket cookie cutter

I love this one. And it's only about $7 with shipping.




7. The "Moonpie" cookie cutter

This cookie cutter looks mysteriously similar to the Moonpie logo. I'm just sayin...




8. Galilea Moon-Phase Clock

Provides date, time, & Moon phase.




9.
The Robot B9

This one is also listed over at MSNBC's Cosmic Log Geek Gift List as well. The "Lost in Space" robot replicas are being produced by one of our teams: Next Giant Leap. This gift carries a hefty price tag of $24,500, but profits will go toward the team's efforts to win the GLXP.



10. The Fourth Law of Robotics t-shirt

It's only appropriate that this gift follows gift #9. From @Quarkspin, we get another amazing Think Geek gift idea.

The shirt reads: "4) A geek may not injure a robot or, through inaction, allow a robot to come to harm."



11. Incredibly Awesome Space Traveler Poster

@Chris_Radcliff pointed us to this space poster, which looks really slick. Simple, clean, and let's you know if you're cut out for this space travel thing.



12. Certified Space Traveler shirt

It is the t-shirt form of #11, also recommended by @Chris_Radcliff. The cool thing about the company that makes these is that they donate all proceeds to a "non-profit writing center for young people" called 826 Seattle.



13. Moon Pendant

This lovely lunar light is courtesy of @Amoroso. Designed by Buzz Aldrin!



14. TANG!

@rsisk101 reminds us of the basics of space -- Tang. Every true space geek would love this gift. Right? Right?



15. The Space Pen

Another staple for space geeks, you're thinking. But check out this 40th Apollo Anniversary edition: this is like the Saturn V of Space Pens. Thanks for finding this, @cariann!



16. Moon Globe

If you want to give someone the Moon, @cariann points us to a good place to find Moon globes.



17. Space Food Sticks

I don't know about this one, @QuarkSpin. But I will admit that it is a classic. I also like the "Splashdown Flavor Mix" on the same site.



17. Lunar Boot Stepping Stone

@Quarkspin finds us a clever Moon gift for the garden.



18. Moon in my Room

@TaviGreiner found a fun Moon gift for kids: a remote control, illuminated model Moon. It has the 12 phases, auto-illumination when dark, and just sounds plain cool.



19. Piece of Historic Launch Pad 36

From the cool collectibles category, @RobertPearlman points out pieces of the pad that launched the Surveyor, Pioneer, and Mariner spacecrafts.



20. *Free* Space Station Calendar for 2010

@csete found a free 2010 International Space Station calendar from NASA. Just download, print, and post!



21. The Right Stuff

Think money can't buy "The Right Stuff"? @drewbenn has evidence to the contrary!



22. WiFi Detector Shirt

@txflygirl found this awesome shirt which is like the gift that keeps on giving to fellow geeks. The shirt lights up and shows the current wifi signal around the wearer.



23. Motherboard Christmas Ornaments

@txflygirl has the best computer geek suggestions!




____________________________________________________________________________

Thanks everyone who participated today, this is a great list!

Stratofox and the DARPA Network Challenge

This Saturday, DARPA (the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency) is holding the DARPA Network Challenge. DARPA describes this $40,000 challenge as

a competition that will explore the roles the Internet and social networking play in the timely communication, wide-area team-building, and urgent mobilization required to solve broad-scope, time-critical problems.

The rules are on the site, but the basic idea is that DARPA will deploy 10 big numbered red weather balloons with official DARPA representatives on site at various locations across the U.S., and the winner will be the one to identify the locations of these balloons. DARPA expects the winner to need to form large, geographically dispersed but communicating teams to be able to find the balloons. There's also the possibility, if "reality TV" is any indication, that some competitors will try to publish misleading information about the balloon locations. Competitors can only submit a limited number of locations, which may make it difficult to simply trust locations that are made public without some sort of confirmation. Other complications and innovative approaches may be revealed on the day of the challenge.

You could see how certain aerospace technology, such as Google Earth or other geographical information systems technology, GPS, satellite telecommuncations, and remote sensing via satellite or airplane (or balloon?) might play a role in this challenge, but the predominant technology may be social media - especially if your team can get thousands upon thousands of people looking with you. The DARPA Network Challenge Wiki covers some possible strategies. Does the space community have the social organization and enthusiasm to get thousands of participants looking for balloons as they go about their regular Saturday activities?

One of the teams registered for the Challenge is Stratofox, a highly skilled amateur "aerospace tracking & recovery team". I've seen a couple Stratofox presentations at Space Access. The team has expertise in finding balloons, but under different circumstances - tracking and recovering high-altitude balloons. They often work with small rocket entrepreneurs and researchers. They certainly play a role supporting the type of innovative work that space prize competitions seek to encourage. Here's a detailed post from Stratofox on what they're doing with the DARPA Network Challenge and how to help them (especially if you see and confirm one of the balloons): DARPA Network Challenge 2009. There are also some twitter posts about it at @ikluft.

Here are some additional general information sources for the Challenge:

@DARPA_News (twitter)
Balloon hunt goes viral - Cosmic Log
Looking for Balloons and Insights to Online Behavior - New York Times: This one notes that we can expect more DARPA challenges in the future:

Dr. Lee said the agency would continue to pursue a number of large and small challenge-style contests to foster what he described as new ways to tap into pools of talented individuals and creative groups.

Bucks for Buck Rogers

Buck Rogers, the classic space hero that first emerged during a time when space exploration was merely a dream of the distant future, is being brought back to life. Just announced is the development of 20 web episodes by The Cawley Entertainment Company, targeted to be launched (har har) in late 2010. Here is the retro-futuristic teaser that was just released this week:



I don't know about you, but I can't think of a better time to resurrect the spirit of Buck Rogers, and way-out-there dreams of the future of space exploration that can ignite our imaginations.