Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
NASA Piracy Space Science

NASA Charters Flights Aboard Virgin's SpaceShipTwo 76

Zothecula writes "Although Virgin Galactic is generally known as a space tourism company, it sees research experiments as a future mission segment and significant business opportunity. To this end, the company has signed a contract with NASA to provide up to three charter flights on its SpaceShipTwo suborbital spaceplane. The deal follows the curtain closing on the Space Shuttle program earlier this year and is part of NASA's Flight Opportunities Program, which is charged with providing reduced-gravity environments for research experiments while encouraging the emerging commercial space industry." In related news, a 68,000-sq. ft. facility has opened in California that will assist in the assembly of SpaceShipTwo spaceplanes.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

NASA Charters Flights Aboard Virgin's SpaceShipTwo

Comments Filter:
  • by element-o.p. ( 939033 ) on Monday October 17, 2011 @03:28PM (#37742906) Homepage

    No, there won't, no catastrophe required. The limits of materials, chemical energy sources and physics are well understood. Or have you failed to notice that nothing really has changed as far as our capacity to move mass?? A 747 from 1969 flies at the same height, same speed, using the same chemical fuels as today, and it is built with the same materials. Yes, there were compressor blades made with carbon fiver [sic] in the 1960s already.

    You could have said the same thing about horse-drawn carriages in the Middle Ages, and you would have been every bit as wrong. We went from hot-air ballons to the Saturn V in under a century, and now we've plateau'd. Our progress is likely to be evolutionary rather than revolutionary for a while yet, but if you think there is nothing left to discover simply because we haven't seen the same explosive growth in rocket propulsion lately that we saw around the middle of the 20th century, I'd argue that you are either naive or ignorant of history. Just because you can't foresee the next big breakthrough doesn't mean there isn't one.

    But you can already go on a Mig, rent a Cessna, etc... Do you do that? Do you know anyone who does?

    Why, yes, as a matter of fact, I DO know someone who rents Cessnas (...and Citabrias and Pipers and...). I've rented them for about 950 hours of flight time. I have also rented them to others, and taught some of those same people how to fly them themselves.

    It's much more fun than being in a sub-orbital ballistic tin can.

    Maybe, maybe not. The best part of flying to me was going some place I had never been before; I love exploring and flying opened up new places to explore. However, quite honestly, it only took a couple of years before hundred-dollar-hamburger runs got boring. I loved spin training, so I imagine acrobatic flight would breathe new life into my enjoyment of flying -- for a while -- but I'm sorry...there's something about touching the edge of space and going some place where only a handful of people in the entire history of the human race have ever gone that is beyond comparison to anything else on earth. YMMV, of course, but I'd forsake flying GA for the rest of my life in a heartbeat for a chance to hitch a ride in one of those "sub-orbital ballistic tin cans".

It's a naive, domestic operating system without any breeding, but I think you'll be amused by its presumption.

Working...