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Big dreams, few results in private space exploration

by Staff Writers
Las Cruces, New Mexico (AFP) Sept 30, 2007
A dusty launchpad in a remote region of New Mexico could become one of the first gateways to the heavens for private individuals clamoring to be the pioneer generation of space tourists.

If British billionaire Richard Branson's vision is realised, by 2010, tourists could be paying around 200,000 dollars to board "SpaceShipTwo" and be rocketed into space to experience weightlessness before returning to earth.

Branson's Virgin Galactic has already begun taking reservations for seats aboard "SpaceShipTwo", a six-seater reusable spacecraft developed by American engineer Burt Rutan.

"I think they will get two or three missions a day, five days a week, around 700, 800 flights a year," Ben Woods, a member of the New Mexico Spaceport Authority told AFP.

Woods said New Mexico authorities hope to regenerate the region through commercial space travel, denying it will merely become a folly of the super-rich.

"If you look at this strictly as saying 'Well we're going to have some rich people come up to take a joyride' you can misinterpret what we are actually doing, what the real endgame is here," Woods said.

"The intention from the very beginning was to undertake this as part of an economic development impact for the entire community in New Mexico," he adds.

Rutan, who earned 10 million dollars in 2004 after winning a competition to design a manned spacecraft that could be launched into space twice within 15 days, believes the launch of the first commercial spaceflights will lead to the mushrooming of other private operators.

"If we go through a time period where the focus is on flying the consumer... there will be a breakthrough to enormous volume," Rutan said at a recent conference in Pasadena to mark 50 years of space exploration.

Lowering the costs of sending people and objects into space represents the biggest challenge facing entrepreneurs. William Ballhaus, the chief executive of Aerospace Corporation, estimates it costs around 20,000 dollars to fire a kilogram of matter into space.

South African entrepreneur Elon Musk, whose private company SpaceX has a contract with the US government to send satellites into orbit, believes "private space travel should model itself on other high-tech sectors" such as data processing to bring costs down.

Private space exploration has not been without its setbacks however. In July, three of Rutan's employees were killed during ground tests of rocket engines for "SpaceShipTwo". Last year, a SpaceX rocket carrying a US military satellite exploded shortly after its launch in the Pacific Marshall Islands.

While Virgin and SpaceX concentrate their resources on building space tourism and providing an alternative means of commercial satellite launches, other companies are attempting to build business in less obvious means.

Space Services Inc (SSI) offers to shoot the ashes of loved ones into space, making worldwide headlines earlier this year when a capsule carrying a portion of Star Trek actor James Doohan was launched to an altitude of 100 kilometers before returning to Earth.

SSI's services start at 495 dollars for a basic flight into space, while at the pricier end of the scale, private individuals can pay around 12,500 dollars to have the ashes of loved ones shot onto the Moon or into orbit.

Meanwhile, Internet search giant Google is hoping to spark a private space race by offering 20 million dollars for anyone who manages to land a robot on the moon capable of roaming around the lunar landscape, sending back high-resolution snaps and data.

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NASA, NSBRI Select 17 Proposals In Space Radiation Research
Washington DC (SPX) Sep 26, 2007
The crews of future missions to the moon and Mars could face serious health risks from exposure to space radiation. NASA and the National Space Biomedical Research Institute, known as NSBRI, Houston, will fund 17 new research projects that will enable NASA to better understand and reduce those risks. Scientists at universities, research institutions and private companies in eight states will conduct the studies.







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