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Rules Set for $50 Million America's Space Prize

An anonymous reader wrote in to say that The rules have been set for Robert Bigelow's $50 million 'America's Space Prize'. The gist of it is that the winner needs to get a crew of five people up 400km, complete two orbits of the Earth, and then do it again within 60 days. I've got a gremlin and a huge rubber band... now if I only had 4 friends!

4 of 548 comments (clear)

  1. Re:To little? by JDevers · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My take on these type of awards is that the cash prize is just there to try to encourage both the small and inventive teams as well as help pay back some of the bills accrued by the big teams. The real reward will come a few years AFTER the competition, but the award will help keep the company solvent from point A to B.

    Basically, this isn't like a lottery or something where if you spend $11 to make $10 you loose, instead you got to do $11 worth of science for only $1 and more importantly you might be able to move your company/team towards a future where you can make 10x-100x times the award per year or more...

  2. Lighten up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    " The risks involved increase polynomially the longer the craft is active."

    I don't mean this the way this sounds, but I think you made this up completely. You may be right. But I don't see any data to support this.

    "If people die in the course of attaining this prize"

    People die skydiving, scuba diving, bungee jumping, skiing... all the time. Unlike many people, I don't think the loss of a spacecraft with 6 people on board is any more tragic than the loss of 6 people in a minivan accident on the freeway.

    "say goodbye to private space travel and hello to new laws and regulations."

    New laws and regulations are inevitable anyway. Or did you think Virgin Airlines (Branson) is just going to fire up Spaceship one and start taking reservations? Its really hard getting FCC certified for any kind of commercial flights.

    "The chilling effect from "Columbia" is nothing compared to what will happen if a private attempt goes wrong."

    What chilling effect? The space shuttle is a piece of crap; it should be grounded because its too expensive.

    "This contest also has the potential to create an international incident."

    So does fingerprinting and retina scanning all foreigners entering the country, but that doesn't seem to have stopped us.

    Stop worrying about the sky falling.

  3. Re:Sounds like a recipe for disaster by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 5, Insightful
    If people die in the course of attaining this prize, say goodbye to private space travel and hello to new laws and regulations.
    Yep. Just look at what happened when people first died in a private automotive accident. The government stepped in, and now we're all back to horse and buggy.
    --

    How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
  4. Rutan is leading contender to win, though. by MtViewGuy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think people forget that Burt Rutan's company is probably the leading candidate to win this US$50,000,000 prize.

    Scaled Composites did a lot of development work for both the McDonnell-Douglas Delta Clipper and Lockheed Martin Venture Star projects. This means Scaled Composites already has enough technical knowledge to start work on a space vehicle to win this prize as soon as they get enough funding to pull it off (Paul Allen's Vulcan Ventures could easily part with the US$200,000,000 estimated development cost; Allen's group paid US$30,000,000 to develop the X-Prize winner).