Moon Express Signs Launch Contract For Possible First Private Lunar Landing
MarkWhittington writes: According to a story in Space.com, Moon Express, one of the leading contestants in the Google Lunar X Prize competition, has made a giant leap toward its goal of being the first private group to land on the moon. The company has signed a contract with Rocket Lab, a new launch company based in New Zealand, for five launches of its upcoming Electron rocket. The first two launches will take place in 2017 and will be attempts to land the MX-1 lander on the lunar surface in time to win the prize by the current deadline by the end of that year.
No, they won't.
Why? Because first launches *never* happen on time...
"I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
....what? "falls" into space? You need to reach escape velocity (the direction of which interestingly doesn't matter). At the poles, you have to do it all by yourself, on the equator you only need to add sufficient speed to what you're already getting due to Earth's rotation.
CLI paste? paste.pr0.tips!
The mighty private innovators and job creators took 60 years to just try to *imitate* what government did over half a century ago, and that's only because the innovators copy what was done before??
All glory capitalism! Boo to socialism!
The Federal Government only funded the project. Douglas, Boeing, Chrysler, North American, and many other companies actually did the development and manufacturing.
The biggest difference between then and now is that back then, the government was willing to spend just about anything that it cost to make it happen, and had the purse to do so. Now, non-government entities, be they public companies, private companies, nonprofits, whatever, do not have the financial resources of the Federal Government, so they're trying to scale what we previously did fast an expensively to something that's not as fast to develop, but is a lot more affordable.
Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
But New Zealand is on the underside of the Earth, so they have to use magnets to hold themselves to the ground. You just remove the magnets from the rocket, and it falls out into space.
....what? "falls" into space?
Yes. Try this simple experiment: Put a globe on your desk. Hold a coin or other dense object against the south pole with your finger. Now let go. What happens? I falls *away* from the globe. That doesn't happen in the northern hemisphere, unless you flip the globe over, and there is no way to flip the entire earth. Of course, the south pole is the ideal launch point, but it is cold and logistically difficult. So New Zealand is about as good as you are going to get.
You need to reach escape velocity
Yes, of course. But you need to learn to use gravity instead of fighting it. We already do this with gravity assist off other planets, so there is no reason we can't do it with the earth as well.
I'll be shocked and astounded if this actually ever takes place.
A Moon shot is a hell of trick to pull off, even getting into orbit is beyond the capability of most countries, let alone transit to the Moon.
Space travel is hard; it's expensive, it's complex, and space is probably the most unforgiving environment imaginable.
Color me skeptical; I don't think this is going to happen via private industry for another 20 to 50 years at the very least.
I'd be overjoyed to be wrong, though! :)
Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
That seems limited - it shows a lack of vision. They need to THINK BIG.
I think the company should be called Planet Express. I even have some thoughts regarding what their ships might look like.
#DeleteChrome
Insightful? Seriously?
I'm having trouble deciding whether this is ironic or tragic (or meta-ironic?)... Guess I'll have to settle for meta-tragic.
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve your problem, you're not using enough of it. --AC