NASA Eyes Cash Prizes Of Its Own 289
joeldg writes "Wired is reporting that NASA is considering offering cash prizes for space innovation.
'Lembeck said NASA would consider offering $10 million to $30 million in prizes to encourage private investors to develop space vehicles. Such prizes appear compatible with the vision for space exploration released last week by a White House commission that studied President Bush's plan to send Americans back to the moon and possibly to Mars.'"
space prizes (Score:5, Funny)
Re:space prizes (Score:5, Funny)
Add an X and go for spacepr0n.
The Spice Network presents EXXXTREME SPACE!
Just think, in microgravity everyone has perky breasts!
Just wear those condoms, guys. We don't need your spooge getting in the attitude controls.
Re:space prizes (Score:4, Funny)
Next on HBC.... Average Joe Wants to Marry A Trillionaire On Survivor Asteroid
god i hope not (Score:2)
One Question (Score:4, Funny)
Re:One Question (Score:5, Funny)
But in the spirit (pun intended) of the good ol' USA, we might've missed a couple conversions, but both of our mars rovers are looking pretty good right now, aren't they?
Re:One Question (Score:3, Funny)
but how on Earth (no pun intended) was the above comment modded insightful?
Perhaps he was modded insightful when the mod meant funny, but the mod wanted him to get actual karma for the mod? I've noticed people seem to be doing that lately as a form of protest against the fact that funny mods don't get karma anymore....
Re:One Question (Score:5, Funny)
Don't be too hard on the Beagle.
To understand what happens its useful to know a little of the background of the people and places behind this project.
For many years the BBC used to have a television production facility on the same campus as the open university, where Colin Pillinger works. In this fertile environment Mr Pillinger would of come into contact with BBC employees. Now, the BBC is well known for its innovative techniques in special effects and ground breaking children's television.
With hindsight it is perhaps too easy to suggest that he should not have been so influenced by the construction techniques on the children's television show known as "Blue Peter".
By using the same techniques and the customary large quantities of sticky back plastic, old washing up liquid bottles and lots of sticky tape the team was able to put together a space probe in record time.
An interesting note is that the project nearly had to be scrapped as Mr. Pillingers mum was using fairy liquid and as we all know a small amount of that brand goes a long way and she was not willing to allow her son to have the bottle until she had used every drop. This particular bottle was needed to construct part of the mechanism used to deploy one of the airbags.
This is where the project downfall came from. On their tight British project budget they had no choice but to purchase their own bottle but could only afford the supermarkets own brand. Unfortunately the lower quality of the plastic in this product is now suspected to have caused a catastophic failure to deploy one of the airbags.
While you Americans may be tempted to look down on our brave little attempt this would not be wise as we might then have to remind you about the following probes: mars observer, climate orbiter and the polar lander. If that fails we might then have to mention a nasty incident during the war of 1812 that required the white washing of a well known building located in Washington D.C. :-)
Re:One Question (Score:3, Informative)
But they might be able to give you a league [northwestern.edu] for your foot [foottalk.com].
Re:One Question (Score:2)
cash prize, like.. the X-Prize? (Score:5, Insightful)
Early flight was the same (Score:5, Informative)
Re:cash prize, like.. the X-Prize? (Score:4, Insightful)
So, NASA wants to award a prize for the development of a deeper-space vessel. If I develop a lunar capable spacecraft and win the prize, how does this help NASA? Do they expect that they'll get design rights to the spacecraft? I just don't understand why government would be giving away our tax money as a prize for a private company to make money. Maybe it is time for NASA to just go away completely. Any of NASA's space technology necessary for national defense or the like could be absorbed into USSTRATCOM. It is clear that at the very minimum, NASA needs to be completely rebuilt. What remains of the shuttle fleet is old and outdated and expensive to fly. We have a partially assembed ISS that seems to serve little purpose unless it is built out to allow for a larger crew as originally designed. The Mars Rovers offer good science but you could easily retain those talented guys as part of a new organization or a stand-alone JPL.
That being said, I'd donate in a heartbeat to a private X-Prize II contest that would have awards for a manned Lunar or Mars mission.
Re:cash prize, like.. the X-Prize? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:cash prize, like.. the X-Prize? (Score:2)
I would find that model acceptable. Whoever buys copies of SpaceShipOne will get a good deal- the X-Prize footed the $10M and someone like Virgin is going to come along and order a few copies and just pay for the spacecraft.
Re:cash prize, like.. the X-Prize? (Score:3, Informative)
IOW, NASA's base cost would be 50%-500% more than a small companies. That is where the cost savings comes from. And don't forget, NASA doesn't really build anything, the subcontract most of that work out to large aerospace corps.
Re:cash prize, like.. the X-Prize? (Score:3, Insightful)
If I develop a lunar capable spacecraft and win the prize, how does this help NASA?
Um, isn't NASA's mission to promote the exploration of space, or something like that? So offering prizes that bring about competition to accomplish the goals NASA sets for the prizes (the goals being in line with NASA's space mission), then NASA is accomplishing their mission. Furthermore, by offering prizes instead of contracting development, NASA can really save some real money on development and at the end of it they h
Re:cash prize, like.. the X-Prize? (Score:3, Insightful)
For those of you who are hard of reading, here's what I wrote again (emphasis added):
Private enterprise brings different priorities (Score:4, Insightful)
All you say is true, but this can be viewed as a retroactive subsidy towards R&D. If a company like Scaled has some plans to exploit this potentially lucrative market, the prospect of potentially spending 10 million if you win is much more palatable then a gauranteed expenditure of 20 million in R&D. Demanding success of the prize recipient also removes the risk of fraud by questionable contractors.
As has been mentioned, the aviation industry has progressed rapidly through such "contests", particularly the lockheed martins, et all. Stealth didn't become so common because private industry wanted it, or because government invented it. The government set the challenge, and let Private industry worry about keeping the margins low.
Finally, we've all,as you do in your post, griped enough about NASA expenditures to know this is a good idea. I'm inclined to think that a private company would not have come up with a re-entry shield that is composed of hundreds of ceramic tiles, all of which have to be inspected pre and post launch. It would simply not be cost effective. We already ran the crash program to space. Now lets run the slow, sensible one. Get private industry involved. Allow the profit motive in the lifting stage, not just the payload stage.
The sooner we ween space transport off of the government teat, the sooner we stop hearing about all the better ways government can spend money on this or that social program. If all that can be done is to remove that chestnut from the debate, I say it's worth it.
Re:cash prize, like.. the X-Prize? (Score:2)
Re:cash prize, like.. the X-Prize? (Score:2)
Give the money and the brains a chance and let's see what happens. How many "Hack This" contests have there been with a reward attached?
Nothing new here.
At least, not yet. Open source space. Ahhh!
Re:cash prize, like.. the X-Prize? (Score:5, Interesting)
Makes you go hmm, that's for sure. I've been for this sort of thing for a long time, but now I have my doubts.
NASA is very competitive in its own right, having been invented essentially to put the Soviets out of the space biz. After Apollo (mission success?), the Agency refused to die, and, sadly, its competitive culture survived along with it, with dire consequences for progress in space.
Hallway talk at NASA centers is brazenly disdainful of outsiders. This results in frequent miscommunications with contractors. This broken flow of information played a major role in the failure of Mars Climate Orbiter and Polar Lander.
NASA officials routinely steer potential investors clear of launch startups. This happened to the Rotary Rocket engine team, who were labelled "amateurs." NASA recommended its own FasTrac engine instead. Investors went along with it, and Rotary's engine team got canned. BTW, the rotary team re-formed as XCOR, which, on a pathetically tiny shoe-string budget, built numerous rockets and the first rocket plane ever licensed to perform at an air show. Meanwhile, FasTrac limped along into obscurity.
NASA is brutally competitive. It's used every rule at its disposal for over 46 years to keep space exploration within a small, trusted club of fat insiders. It will be trivially easy for NASA to stack its prizes with enough complex filing and eligibility rules to keep the rabble distracted and on the ground.
Roton (Score:4, Interesting)
"Didn't work." was his reply. The thing was too heavy.
sweet!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
then all NASA needs to do is sit back and let private companies do the engineering which means that they can send the rest of the ash over to propulsion research.
this works well because it helps mitigate the investments made by companies that win and the recognition of the win helps future sales of the products based on the new tech.
Re:sweet!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:sweet!!! (Score:3, Insightful)
I like it. There's some bureaucracy, but not in the actual design, construction or testing elements. The government wants the paper to prove it's doing a good job, but with private grants at least there's a point where the paper-for-paper-sake ends.
Re:sweet!!! (Score:3, Informative)
Which would be really great if NASA's budget worked as a big sum of money they're free to spend any which way they choose. However, thanks to Congress and earmarked funding, that is nowhere near the current reality. From the CAIB Report [www.caib.us] (Volume 1, Chapter 5, Pg 8):
Details of the prize just in (Score:3, Funny)
Hmm... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Hmm... (Score:5, Interesting)
The prizes are to small considering the scale of the achievements required. X-Prize was a 'radical' venture, with a 10 million dollar prize, but that's just for sub-oribital. If you want to truely inspire a 'gold rush' mentality, it's not hard. Set a worthy jackpot for an 'impossible' task.
The current environment of government contractors hanging around the 'space business' today just couldn't survive without a few open ended contracts to manage/maintain equipment on a cost plus basis. Serious prizes will generate serious ingenuity to win them. If Nasa offered 10% of it's annual budget in this fashion, they would achieve on the order of 10,000% the results they currently get by feeding the beaurocracy with nothing but money, money, and yet more money.
If you think about it logically, a martian sample return mission done by current nasa methodologies, would require a multi billion dollar budget, and it would still be looking at a high probability of failure. A billion dollars payable on reciept of 25kg of martian soil. this is not a contest, it's an offer to purchase. Publicize the offer, and verify the 'terms of purchase' via published documents. Sit back, wait. Somebody will deliver.
This is actually perfect for the existing bearocracy. They can get out of the business of doing scary things that kill people, but still keep enough beaurocrats on staff to administer the payouts. Not really a lot of change from what nasa is today, a 'space agency' that doesn't fly into space, just spends money.
The true elegance of this scenario, it's a results oriented system, that precludes any opportunity to pork barrel with the money. Fair value for work done will probably bankrupt a few companies currently working on Nasa projects tho, especially if contractual terms are changed from cost-plus to a results oriented system.
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Sadly, this is also why things like this are probably going to end up being extremely limited, at least coming from the government.
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
Re:Hmm... (Score:2)
The only competition carmack and crowd are in, is for the mindset of /. junkies. Nothing they have done even remotely resembles a serious attempt at lofting a spaceship. It's good for the pr machine tho, and I'm sure they sell a lot of $125 'droppings' on thier website. It's an interesting business model they have tho, play with rocket parts, write a blog about it, then sell the broken
Re:Hmm... (Score:3, Informative)
Heh, as flamebaited as this is, I suggest you go take a look at the movies on the Armadillo site. They're getting very close to launching the big rocket and testing it's landing. Armadillo's got a rocket (it's a prototype) that can launch straight up and then hover to a landing. Doesn't look like they've tested the thing flying around in the atmosphere yet, though.
Impressive stuff, in spite of your flamebait-colored eyeglasses.
Re:Hmm... (Score:5, Informative)
I used to work on a DARPA-funded project, and I can tell you - almost certainly.
There has been a push w/ governmental agencies, including NASA, to use COTS (Commercial Off-The-Shelf) products. A private company researches and develops a certain product product (which NASA could do as well), but can then sell the products to a variety of outlets for profit (which NASA is forbidden to do). So NASA buying a one-off of a COTS component pays only a fraction of the R&D cost that the company spent making it.
As an example, I know of a group that needed a very linear high-bandwidth op-amp for a project. Such an op-amp within their specs didn't exist, so they began the intensive effort of designing one themselves. Halftway through the process another company (maybe Burr-Brown? I forget) put a device on the market that did meet their specs. Although they spent time/money on the research, they still saved out in the end because they just bought and used that op-amp without wasting further development efforts.
The big win for COTS comes from the fact that NASA and other governmental agencies and labs CANNOT sell products for profit, but private companies CAN. For example, the lab I worked in (not my group, though) did alot of radar research. After proving new radar concepts would work, companies like Lockheed-Martin or Raytheon would go and build many of them, making millions of $$$ for themselves. Such is the life of research ;-)
Re:Hmm... you mean 'yes'? (Score:2, Interesting)
A few questions (Score:2, Funny)
". .
Does the asteroid have to originally be part of the Earth?
Does the asteroid have to be collected whilst it is outside the Earth's atmosphere?
How big of a piece is required?
Indeed,
"the first soft landing on the moon"
Begs the question what exactly is a hard landing?
Re:A few questions (Score:2, Informative)
a soft landing is like the moon landings, nice and soft...
while its cool... (Score:2)
Hopefully we'll be able to hop a flight to the moon in the next 50 years.
LAte? (Score:3, Insightful)
Diversity is a good thing.
Re:while its cool... (Score:3, Insightful)
There's probably a few people at Nasa see the big light bulb coming on. Scaled has achieved sub-orbital capability on a budget rumored between 20 and 35 million dollars. This included the design, build, and test flight stages of the program. The same program running in the Nasa culture, using Nasa methodologies, would not be finished the preliminary design study before i
I'll start (Score:3, Funny)
$10 to the first company that develops a
spaceship that flies to Mars and back.
Re:I'll start (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I'll start (Score:5, Funny)
smart idea (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:smart idea (Score:3, Insightful)
That's a pretty big generalization you got there, pilgrim.
Re:smart idea (Score:4, Insightful)
That's not really true, so I'll take it you haven't worked with NASA much at all. I've worked with NASA scientists on several projects and the scientists/engineers there are typically top-notch. Much more knowledgeable than most engineers I've dealt with from the private sector. NASA's problems primarily stem from its bureaucracy and red-tape, not from shortcomings of its engineers.
And to take your skepticism further, the smartest people I've encountered to date have been university professors (at least in physics). Usually more likely to collaborate w/ NASA than with the private sector, too.
Re:smart idea (Score:2)
Nope. The smartest people aren't in any "sector"--they've made their ten million, got out, and are working on whatever the hell they want.
Wage-slaves, be they government or private or non-profit, are simply not motivated enough to be the smartest people in the world.
Thieving bastards (Score:2, Interesting)
Space exploration is yet another field that should be handled entirely by private enterprise & charity.
Re:Thieving bastards (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Thieving bastards (Score:2)
Um, to find new customers?
Re:Thieving bastards (Score:3, Insightful)
The public is not forced to finance any specific project. This is not a case of taxation without representation. Congressmen and the President are your voice for how your money should be spent.
Each member of society, however, cannot be given a choice as to exactly what their individual sum of money will be used for. S
Risky bussness venture (Score:4, Interesting)
And that would, you know, kinda suck.
Re:Risky bussness venture (Score:2, Insightful)
And I don't think anyone would try to make a business out of the prize money alone. Spaceship One is costing around $20million with a prize of only $10million. The investers know this, but what it does give them is (if they win) a bit of a coupon for some of their R&D but mostly they huge huge pu
don't crininalize the model rocket enthusiasts. (Score:5, Insightful)
http://www.space.com/missionlaunches/launches/r
and
http://www.sas.org/E-Bulletin/2003-02-28/featur
Re:don't crininalize the model rocket enthusiasts. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:don't crininalize the model rocket enthusiasts. (Score:4, Funny)
I think Anonymous Coward url postings should automatically be made links under the assumption that ACs are too stupid to do it themselves.
The rest of us can write html, right?
In Other Words... (Score:5, Insightful)
NASA has a budget of USD$16 Billion for this year alone. $10M to $30M?
Lets see prizes in the range of $100M on up. That would make the financial investment risks FAR easier to swallow, and we might actually see more serious commercial enterprises make the attempt.
Seeing SpaceShipOne's successes makes me dream of a brighter future. I'd love to see serious interplanetary space travel within my lifetime.
Re:In Other Words... (Score:3, Interesting)
This whole thing stinks. I'm fully in favour of private space research--but having NASA give money away makes it "publicly funded private enterprise." In other words, companies are spending tax money on personal profit.
Have one or the other, or even both, but don't give public money to private enterprise.
Re:In Other Words... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:In Other Words... (Score:3, Insightful)
Right now, NASA is giving money - billions and billions of dollars every year - to contractors like Boeing and Lockmart. And they're getting precisely NOWHERE. But you have no problem with that?
For a fraction of that amount put into a prize foundation, private industry will do the rest. Here's a hint: you don't fly on a government airline, do you?
I think you need to see past your socialist "public good, private bad" i
how about 100 billion for a space drive? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:how about 100 billion for a space drive? (Score:2)
1. Invent interstellar propulsion system
2. ???
3. Profit!
Re:how about 100 billion for a space drive? (Score:3, Funny)
Sure, but we've only just met...
Re:how about 100 billion for a space drive? (Score:4, Insightful)
$1 billion to the first person to establish some sort of viable industry in orbit.
Um, I think that prize is already being offered by basic economics. Or something comparable, at least.
Comment removed (Score:3, Funny)
Compatible with Bush's vision? (Score:3, Insightful)
I guess its Lembeck's job to say nice things about NASA and those who control its purse-strings, but its a bit too optimistic to expect private industry to do a Mars launch anytime in the forseeable future. Heck, its hard to see NASA doing it, or any good reason to do it as a moon base would be safer, cheaper, and practical!
This sounds like damage-control after Scaled's success yesterday. Is NASA scared perhaps? Or maybe they don't want to look like a lumbering dinosaur to the tax payers.
Dunno, but the timing of this is very suspicious.
Re:Compatible with Bush's vision? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Compatible with Bush's vision? (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't quite understand a lot of opinions out there that imply that NASA folks think that this is "stepping on their turf". Nothing could be farther from the truth. We'd dearly love (and hope) to see the day where we are able to buy "cargo delivery" to low earth orbit at relatively low cos
It's good business (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:It's good business (Score:2)
Re:It's good business (Score:2)
Now there's a reality show I might actually watch!
Finally, a reasonable use for NASA launch money (Score:5, Insightful)
We live in a very strange world (Score:5, Funny)
One is about a group of hard working scientists who dream of a world where new possibilities are created and human kind evolve to a higher level and the other about a group of litigious bastards who dream of a world where they have so much money that it leaks through their ass and everybody listen to the same crappy music made by some fake overpaid artist.
Mmm, we live in a very strange world.
suggested goals (Score:3, Interesting)
500 million ( or more ) for the first circum lunar vehicle that meets those requirements.
1 billion for first lunar landing system which can accomplish those requriments. ( launch withen two weeks of return though instead of two weeks from first launch date ).
10 billion for a man on mars and safe return.
Re:suggested goals (Score:2, Insightful)
More info on Lembeck (Score:3, Interesting)
What is interesting is his background....he is not a career civil servant, He's been at NASA for less than two years. Before that he was with small to medium sized companies trying to break into the space business, including Space Industries (who built Wake Shield, that flying saucer thing that was deployed by the Space Shuttle on three missions) and Orbital Sciences (which is turning a fairly nice profit from some of their projects, notably the Pegasus air launched booster).
And he's a damn smart guy with lots of cool ideas that I've known for about seven years. He very much breaks the mold of the staid NASA manager, I'm sure he'd feel right at home with most
No patents! (Score:3, Insightful)
It makes no sense to have the government effectively subsidize the development of a proprietary technology.
Re: (Score:2)
NASA's Centennial Challenges Program (Score:4, Informative)
Speaking of, has anybody heard about what happened at the Centennial Challenges Workshop [nasa.gov] on June 15-16? I haven't been able to find any reports on it. Hopefully at least one slashdotter attended...
Real Incentive... (Score:3, Funny)
In Cash.
Tax Free.
The Catch? The cash is sitting in an unmarked briefcase somewhere on the moon.
Re:Real Incentive... (Score:3, Funny)
With said money, I will promote the best roadside attraction ever: a giant tongue that stretches from the Earth to the Moon! Can't lick _that_!
Profit.
This is old news: NASA's Centennial Challenges (Score:3, Insightful)
The Wired article uses information from this Reuters article [reuters.co.uk] by Deborah Zabarenko.
Reuters: "Within hours of the first private flight to outer space on Monday, a NASA official said the agency might offer millions of dollars in prizes..." This is misleading. NASA's Centennial Challenges program has been in the planning stage for quite some time now.
My opinion on prizes: Prizes are great, but they should complement grants, not replace them. An analogy: If we want to catch Osama bin Laden, we should put a big bounty on him. But that doesn't mean we should call off the military and the CIA. We should post a big bounty AND fund the military and the CIA. Same thing with space: Put a big 'bounty' on space achievements, but fund NASA too.
So we let some rich guy innovate in space? (Score:2)
Remember, this was to only get three people to 100km. Yes its a lot, but a far far away from going to Mars or transporting 500 people to the moon colony for the day.
You cant take the sky from me (Score:2)
Heres to the lunar colonies and the right to read
Industrial Space Facility (Score:2, Interesting)
After a few years, and several millions of $$ in development, the big contracting hogs managed to get it all snuffed. Cost a lot of people their jobs, and led to a nearly useless space station at several factors the cost of the Industrial Space Facility.
Seems to me that companies would be very hesitant to get into this type of realtionship with NASA again.
Syntroxis
Can NASA learn from NSF and Darpa? (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course, this would also limit the potential for pork-barrel spending, and would thus experience difficulties in actually becoming enacted.
Well I'm offering $10,000,000 of my own money... (Score:4, Funny)
How to deal with the red tape of going orbital? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm curious though: How can contestants be able to deal with all the liabilities which that entails? With the test flights of Scaled Composites and Armadillo Aerospace [armadilloaerospace.com], before being allowed to fly they've had to make various government official certain that in a worst-case scenario their craft would remain within the testing zone. With orbital (or even transcontinental) flights, their flight range will have to extend beyond the testing zone and into inhabited areas (even other countries). Governments are able to test things like this because they can deal with the liability, but what about private companies?
No, no no (Score:3, Insightful)
NASA Surrenders (Score:3, Insightful)
Burt Rutan spent $20 million on his prototype. That's pocket change to NASA, yet I haven't seen anything come out of NASA that is even close to what Rutan designed. I haven't seen any NASA spaceplane prototypes even take off, let alone go sub-orbital.
He went sub-orbital on $20 million, I couldn't imagine what Rutan could do with a few hundred million. That's only a fraction of NASA's budget.
Re:NASA Surrenders (Score:4, Insightful)
That's mostly because the US government got there, oh, nearly 40 years ago.
SpaceshipOne is not innovative in any way technologically. It's revolutionary because for the first time, a non-governmental organization did it.
That said, the promise of Apollo was that we'd all be flying to vacations in space in no time. Well, here we are, 30 some odd years since the first Moon landing, and nothing. NASA can't open up the frontier. Private, profit making corporations will. I hope this is the start of the deluge.
Disgusting. (Score:3, Interesting)
How long before NASA starts crying about how no private citizen should have the right to launch into space? That's the opinion they've held for ages, and now they have to get off their ass and try to codify it.
Losers. Death to NASA, glory to the new order.
hrmmm (Score:4, Insightful)
you're damn right it is.
Now they wanna try getting innovators to innovate for them, since they're stuck, one catch though, they'll basically take your idea, give you half the money you deserve from it, and then they end up getting 10 times the funding and the control over space again. Just like any good monopoly over anything, they're trying to pull anything to ensure they keep their superiority and political rights over space. My science teacher did contract work for NASA and recalls it being the worst job he ever had, spending was horrible, and many people were underpaid, and only the higher ups made the most cash. it was a job you had to have a passion for, and NASA did a great job at killing a lot of people's passion for space. My teacher actually gets paid more for teaching than he did working for NASA. Sad as it is.
I dont think too many people will jump at this, because the x-prize is much more fun, and you get to keep your soul afterwards.
Re:Excellent. (Score:2)
Just because its privatized doesn't mean it can't be government funded (vouchers) and it still can be required to meet federal requirements.
Re:Help mummy! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Help mummy! (Score:2)
Re:Incentives, not plans (Score:3, Insightful)