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N-Prize Founder Paul Dear Talks Prizes For Nanosat Race

Rob Goldsmith writes to point out this interview with Dr. Paul Dear, founder of the N-Prize, and explains: "For those of you who haven yet heard of the N-Prize, the N-Prize is a £9,999.99 (sterling) cash prize which can be claimed by any individual, or group, who are able to prove that they have put into orbit a small satellite. The satellite must weigh between 9.99 and 19.99 grams, and must orbit the Earth at least 9 times. This project must be done within a budget of £999.99 (sterling)."

5 of 217 comments (clear)

  1. English - English Translation... by KlTheKiten · · Score: 5, Informative

    "For those of you who haven yet heard of the N-Prize, the N-Prize is a $19,636.90 (dollars) cash prize which can be claimed by any individual, or group, who are able to prove that they have put into orbit a small satellite. The satellite must weigh between 0.35 and 0.71 ounces, and must orbit the Earth at least 9 times. This project must be done within a budget of $1,963.67 (dollars)."

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    ...some days you're the dog, some days you're the hydrant...
    1. Re:English - English Translation... by WhiplashII · · Score: 5, Informative

      Um... as a rocket engineer, I'm afraid what you are arguing makes no sense...

      1. Space is an altitude. Orbit is a velocity. You can orbit 1 inch off the ground if you could some how sustain 8 km/s - for example, if you put a pipe filled with vacuum surrounding the Earth. So to get to orbit, you need a lot of speed, not a particular position.

      2. GEO orbit (35786 km) is really hard to get to - and pretty pointless, really. Go above 400 km and you will hang around quite a while.

      3. If you are in an orbit, you cannot possibly be a risk to airplanes. (Except on the way down, and even then the risk is way smaller than the risk caused by ducks, etc. - assuming you can even survive reentry)

      Probably the easiest way to win this is with a mylar balloon as the "satellite". You could make a very large, highly reflective surface that would last a few orbits.

      That said, this is unlikely to be won - $2K is just too low, it will cost more than that to get flight insurance / government permission.

      --
      while (sig==sig) sig=!sig;
  2. Tight budget by sakdoctor · · Score: 5, Funny

    £999.99 could probably buy enough menthos and coke to launch the projectile.

  3. Re:Get into orbit for a grand? by jersey_emt · · Score: 5, Informative

    From the rules at http://www.n-prize.com/ --

    15. Piggybacking and Shared Resources
    Entrants may not 'piggyback' on other aerospace projects (for example, by launching a satellite as a passenger on a larger launch vehicle). If they do so, the entire cost of the launch will be considered part of the budget of their N-Prize entry. Similarly, no two entries (whether simultaneous or consecutive; whether by the same entrant or different entrants) are allowed to share the cost of common hardware (for example, if a single launch vehicle carries two satellites, then the total cost of the launch vehicle will be considered part of the budget for each of the two satellites).

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    My spoon is too big.
  4. Those guys got it backwards by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    *Prices* look like 9,999.99 so they appear small.
    *Prizes* should look like 10,000.00 so they appear big.