Orbital Becomes Second Private Firm To Send Cargo Craft To ISS
An anonymous reader writes "Orbital Sciences Corp.'s unmanned Cygnus spacecraft delivered 3,000 pounds of equipment, fresh fruit, and Christmas presents from the families of all six ISS spacemen today. 'From the men and women involved in the design, integration and test, to those who launched the Antares (rocket) and operated the Cygnus, our whole team has performed at a very high level for our NASA customer, and I am very proud of their extraordinary efforts,' said David W. Thompson, president and chief executive officer of Orbital, in a written statement from the company."
I think Orbital Sciences and SpaceX are at present the only real contenders for private commercial launch. Jeff Bezos' Blue Cactus or whatever is really just a "vanity project" for the bizillionaire.
If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
Only a few days later than UPS for Xmas presents ;-)
It's been well past time for private enterprise to successfully handle low-earth-orbit delivery, there's nothing in those orbits that's difficult or experimental enough to require nation-state backing in order to fund achieving it. Same should hold true for medium-earth-orbit.
It makes a lot more sense for public projects to handle launches out past geosynchronous orbit, where the technology isn't nearly as reliable and there's less opportunity for profit. Private companies are less likely to develop for technology for high earth orbit as there's just nothing out there to make a profit for them. Governments can drive profitability there by concentrating on science there, which in turn helps drive a market for private companies to service.
The shame of it all is that the Space Shuttle arguably set us back far more in space development than it helped. The Russians eventually even figured it out, though not before they also spent a lot of money not really achieving anything that their Soyuz program and their space station programs couldn't already deliver. Had the shuttle been capable of taking us to the Moon or to at least Lunar orbit, then there might have been some real benefit, but we just sat around in low earth orbit, doing some science but doing too much community relations.
Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
This is the second time they've done it, so the they became the second private firm last year.
http://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2014/01/orbitals-antares-loft-cygnus-orb-1-mission/
theres been a recent boom in privatized space launches and exploration, and while im sure its a good thing for the economy I have my reservations. the START database is an excellent example:
https://standards.nasa.gov/
nasa publishes interesting scientific standards publically which helps further the study of space travel. It also provides a source of independent verification for different components and systems. Privatized space exploration is routinely under intense pressure to redact or restrict access to this information as it is of a "trade secret" nature. Im willing to bet most of the standards data Orbital and SpaceX rely upon and likely refuse to disclose are in fact based upon the START repository.
privatizing space travel and exploration is also in the disinterest of society as historically its natural progression is to increase quarterly revenue in the standard definition of a corporation. issues like environmental impacts then fall to the wayside as 'externalities' and, at worst we turn from sagans starry eyed space voyage to a wal-mart in the stars.
im old, so maybe im overreacting...but I sincerely believe there needs to be some system of independent audit and evaluation in place so that the spirit of space travel doesnt end up a thing of the past.
Good people go to bed earlier.
Fresh fruit? That's some pretty fucking expensive bananas.
How much to put a piece of fruit into orbit?
I mean, I could wait a month to have an apple if I was an astronaut.
Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain with all your metadata.
With all this renewed interest in Space and Space Exploration, I wonder how long before a Planetes(Anime) Style Space Station(ISPV-7) will be put up there, and we start having scheduled trips to the moon :) I wonder if the time set in the series will be accurate, estimating about 2075?
Cargo also included an ant-farm.
[And "video tapes". Because... the '80s?]
Science is all about firing a drunk pig out of a cannon just to see what happens.
It's not exactly a field where there is going to be a diversity of competition, not for the immediate future anyway
I sincerely hope that there will be * MORE * competitors.
Look at the cost ...
Orbital has a $1.9 billion contract with NASA to make eight flights to the space station under the space agency's commercial supply program
For each of the delivery NASA is shelling out more than $237.5 million.
Now, compare this with the cost for India to send a probe to Mars http://science.slashdot.org/story/13/12/01/040246/indian-mars-probe-successfully-enters-sun-centric-orbit
The Indian space project cost India a total of $81 million .
While there are some saying that the Indian space program to Mars only cost $74 million, even with the higher price tag of $81 million it is still ONE THIRD of the price of Nasa is paying Orbital !!
Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !