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$50 million orbital space race launched

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DarienA

The black man everyone at Activision can agree on
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6187724/

OS ANGELES - A Las Vegas hotel magnate who is hoping to build the world's first commercial space stations on Tuesday launched a challenge offering $50 million to the creators of the first privately funded spaceship to reach orbit.

Robert Bigelow, who owns Budget Suites of America, formally announced the long-rumored prize just a day after the first privately funded spaceship rocketed out of the atmosphere and won the $10 million Ansari X Prize, which was designed to spur commercial spaceflight.

Bigelow acknowledged that reaching orbit would be much harder than briefly popping into space as SpaceShipOne did.

"To be honest, I think it's a long shot," he said of any team's chances of winning the prize by 2010 as required.

Faster and higher
SpaceShipOne, built by aircraft designer Burt Rutan and financier Paul Allen, had to travel at about three times the speed of sound in order to reach the 62-mile altitude required to win the Ansari X Prize.

An orbital spacecraft has to travel six times faster and four times higher, and, like NASA's space shuttle, also requires more extensive heat shielding.

Even so, Bigelow said, a commercial orbital spacecraft is "something the United States very badly needs."

Bigelow's space station company, Bigelow Aerospace, also needs it. With the space shuttle off-limits to paying passengers and the Russian Space Agency charging $20 million per seat on its Soyuz ships, a commercial craft could provide the only affordable way for the company to reach orbit.

Contracts to be offered
In addition to the prize money, Bigelow said, the winner of his America's Space Prize stands to gain contracts from Bigelow Aerospace to ferry passengers to and from its stations.

Bigelow Aerospace plans to launch its first space modules on commercial rockets in late 2008 or early 2009, and to send up the first crews by 2010.

The company plans to make a profit by selling standardized space-station modules, complete with life support systems and living quarters, for $100 million each.

Bigelow sees industrial and medical research as the most important uses for the modules, but says they could also serve as space hotels.

Bigelow will front half of the $50 million America's Space Prize, and he is seeking sponsorship for the other half.

"If no one steps forward, we'll cover it," he said. "We just want to make it happen."

To win the contest, which is limited to U.S.-based ventures, a team must build a five-seat spacecraft without government money and send five astronauts into orbit above the Earth twice within 60 days.



Wow... this one isn't going to be claimed for awhile I think....
 

Phoenix

Member
Well, it IS winnable to be sure - and the current NASA shuttle isn't the only methodology you can use to get into orbit so we'll have to see. I think 2010 is too short a time frame because I suspect you'll need to build a different type of launch facility than just taking off from an airfield.
 
Cimarron said:
But why not open this to the world? are they afraid of teh terrorists? :/
Bigelow said, a commercial orbital spacecraft is "something the United States very badly needs."

The prize seems to be motivated by the sponsor's desire to have the United States be the leader in the space travel business. It's nationalistic, but it's his money.
 

SickBoy

Member
Maybe it's a good thing. I'm not sure I'd want Canada's da Vinci Project team trying to reach orbit. :)

Seriously, though, I actually think it can be done, but I'm generally an optimist. Although I would be concerned about the possibility of losing some people (which I actually thought was a possibility on the X Prize)

-SB
 

SKluck

Banned
The thing is, to develop this and manfacture a working prototype... they would probably be spending pretty close to the prize money.
 

Dan

No longer boycotting the Wolfenstein franchise
SKluck said:
The thing is, to develop this and manfacture a working prototype... they would probably be spending pretty close to the prize money.
Same for the X Prize. It's nothing really new. Any prize though is a major incentive, and it helps create competition which is always a good thing.
 

B'z-chan

Banned
SKluck said:
The thing is, to develop this and manfacture a working prototype... they would probably be spending pretty close to the prize money.

But so did spaceshipone ;P by the time that project was done a lot more money than the 10 million dollar prize was put into it. But you cant pay that kind of money for all the research that they did. Thats like cheap labor. honestly...
 

Phoenix

Member
SKluck said:
The thing is, to develop this and manfacture a working prototype... they would probably be spending pretty close to the prize money.

Yes but then you have a crap load of money given to you by someone who wants to buy the technology for commercial use. If someone spent 150 million and developed a vehicle that could do that, they would make so so much more selling the technology in the open market.
 

G4life98

Member
this is really starting to seem like the early days of flight...with all the contests and challenges

with this and the xprize foundation looking to up the ante, I think we will see someone reach orbit before 2010.
 
SKluck said:
The thing is, to develop this and manfacture a working prototype... they would probably be spending pretty close to the prize money.

Yeah, but at least having a prize takes some of the financial burden off the builders. Without these kind of prizes, it would be impossible to afford any kind of space venture.
 
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