Win the X-Prize Cup 240
fitten writes "CNN is reporting that the X-Prize competition may become an annual event. From the site: 'Hoping to build on the momentum sparked by a private rocket plane's dash into space, supporters of opening the heavens to civilians are turning the winner-take-all race into an annual competition that might further fuel imaginations.'"
Bad idea (Score:5, Insightful)
Why not every 4 years? Even 3 would work. This way, it would give people more time to work on even better designs, perhaps even alternative fuel methods for reaching space.
And that would rock.
Re:Bad idea (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Bad idea (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Bad idea (Score:2)
Re:Bad idea (Score:3, Insightful)
What they should do is run the "x-cup" for five years (maybe raise the ceiling for qualification every year) and start another prize for orbital flight now (x-prize2). I dont know how this would affect the draw of one (x-cup) or t
Re:Bad idea (Score:2)
Im pretty sure the $10Mil prize did little to cover the full development costs of spaceship one. The real money is in the IP.
How exclusive are these Branson plans?
IMHO we dont need any further 'prizes' to ignite this competition, the fires are burning brightly already.
Perhaps a major prize for major milestones, first orbit, the moon....
Re:Bad idea (Score:3, Insightful)
I know people like to refer to it as a stopping point, but what sort of stopping point is a craft built of epoxy with a heavy 250 ISP engine? Exactly what are they going to reuse - the ship's computer?
It's just advertizing and a joy ride; it's not some sort of stepping stone (at least in the technical sense).
Re:Bad idea (Score:5, Insightful)
I agree with you that short, sub-orbital flight is only directly good for joy rides, and advertising. Beyond this however I disagree with you entirely. No offense, but I think you're missing the point.
Why? Because advertising and joy rides are the key to unlocking a revenue stream which can move us toward more useful goals.
Currently the only significant source of direct income from the private sector comes from launching satellites. This is a large source of revenue, but one which is neither very elastic, nor one which places demands on those who provide lift to significantly change the status quo. The cost of launching most satellites is but a fraction of the total cost. Adding together insurance, interest payments and other opportunity costs for capital, they are extraordinarily expensive objects even if launch costs are ignored. The market is narrow and capital intensive.
The result is that the market puts little pressure on firms to lift significantly larger payloads, either measured in volume or in mass. Incrementally reducing cost per pound on existing orbital launch systems would not be likely to increase the demand significantly. The risk of modifying these systems incrementally is simply not justified by the risk or the return on near term capital investment. Worst, no private income stream currently encourages development of manned missions at all.
The X-prize cup goal is provide direct incentive for innovation in manned space transport. It does so by providing a mechanism for directly infusing private capital into manned vehicles in ways that are much more flexible, much more elastic, and which result in pressure on potential space transportation designers to increase both aggregate and per launch lift capacity. The first prize was designed to promote competition in developing an inexpensive re-usable sub-orbital vehicle for carrying passengers. This will generate income in 2 ways. Advertisers will pay to be associated with the product and services provided by commercial users. Passengers able to afford a the ride will provide a significant on-going stream of revenue.
The passenger revenue is highly elastic. at the price of $200K per head, about 6,000 have already expressed serious interest in riding Virgin Galactic. 1.2 billion is nothing to sneeze at. If the price were $100K, that number would rise rapidly. As the price continues to lower, more and more passengers will be able and willing to afford even a sub-orbital jaunt. I'm not wealthy, but I would certainly drive crappy used cars for 5-10 years in return for a trip to space.
The X-prize cup is an annual event, Competitors will vie each year to travel greater distances downrange, achieve higher altitude, launch the most times during the event, carry the largest payloads, etc. The organizers expect that an X-prize competitor will achieve orbital capability in 5-8 years. That apparently would interest you.
In the past 30 years we've gone backwards not forwards. Aside from X-prize vehicles (both Scaled Composites and the 20 or so other contenders), the only manned space vehicles we have are based on designs form the 1960s and 1970s. Huge lift capacity died with apollo.
Without advertising and joy rides to both fund that development and promote competition, how do you propose we get there?
Re:Bad idea (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Bad idea (Score:3, Informative)
Be more specific. (Score:3, Interesting)
Terran, or solar escape velocity? Local, or general?
At local terran escape velocity of 10 kps, you're about ready to start lunar colonization [barnesandnoble.com]. At local solar escape velocity of about 42 kps, you're ready to start mining the Oort cloud [barnesandnoble.com] for volitiles (for space colonies and/or terraforming Mars and Venus) and any other fun stuff out there. At base solar escape velocity of about 620 kps, you can get anywhere in the solar system [barnesandnoble.com], and have a decent
Re:Bad idea (Score:5, Interesting)
Something to think about though, SpaceShipOne only cost about as a much as a well funded, front running 12 meter yacht program.
If you can scrap up the moolah it's now a legitmate choice, boat or space ship.
KFG
Exciting & Exciting==Good! (Score:2, Funny)
Why not every 4 years? Even 3 would work. This way, it would give people more time to work on even better designs, perhaps even alternative fuel methods for reaching space.
Nope, nope, nope!
We need this all right away. Get off your fat butt and get to work! Innovation in rocket science can drive the economy. Why accept it's hard to do? Back in the early days of aviation (barnstromers and all) wild ideas were
Re:Exciting & Exciting==Good! (Score:2)
Just an idea: (Score:3, Insightful)
Perhaps they need to go a different route: I suggest that there is a competition with no set time limit that would do exactly what the X-Prize did:encourage reguar people to try and do what is thought impossible, with engineering and imagination.
Let's say that the next X-Prize was for developing a car tha
Not as interesting as the Bigelow $50 mil prize (Score:4, Insightful)
The Slashdot editors refused to publish my submission, but I think this is much more interesting than repeating the X-Prize year after year, despite the innovation that will come from such an endeavor.
Re:Not as interesting as the Bigelow $50 mil prize (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Not as interesting as the Bigelow $50 mil prize (Score:2)
Re:Not as interesting as the Bigelow $50 mil prize (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Not as interesting as the Bigelow $50 mil prize (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Not as interesting as the Bigelow $50 mil prize (Score:2)
"East cost packages in by 2:00 p.m. delivered to L.A., S.F. or Seattle by 2:00 p.m."
Three hours should be enough time, right?
Re:Not as interesting as the Bigelow $50 mil prize (Score:5, Interesting)
But to answer your question... no. SpaceShipOne couldn't go that far point to point. At 100km, it could make it that far if it *also* had a velocity of ~7800 m/s at that altitude.
However, on the subject of deliveries, it does remind me of something else. I had a friend who worked as a translator for the army during the cold war. She took part in the inspections of one of those regular disarmament agreements, in which both sides agreed to destroy so many missles, and then used it as an excuse to get PR while scrapping their old missiles that they didn't wany any more. The inspectors were there to probe into any space small enough to possibly hide a treaty-limited item.
Well, over there, she got to talking to the Russian equivalent of a (Colonel? I forget what she told me). Anyway, she mentioned to him how much of a waste it was, to see these complex pieces of machinery that can go anywhere in the world in half an hour just be scrapped. She told him about how she had done calculations, and that you could retrofit an ICBM, fuel and launch it, and use it as an intercontinental pizza delivery system. You put the raw pizzas in the top, and they're cooked on reentry, and then the pizza "warhead" parachutes down. If enough pizzas were in demand in a given location to fill the warhead, the delivery cost (assuming you don't have to pay for the missile) would only be 10-20$ per pizza.
According to her, he looked at her like she was completely insane.
Re:Not as interesting as the Bigelow $50 mil prize (Score:2)
If enough pizzas were in demand in a given location to fill the warhead, the delivery cost (assuming you don't have to pay for the missile) would only be 10-20$ per pizza.
According to her, he looked at her like she was completely insane.
And that, right there, is why the west won the cold war.
Re:Not as interesting as the Bigelow $50 mil prize (Score:3, Funny)
The Soviets were really impressed; they sent their teams over to the US with something different: a stick. Literally, a piece of wood cut to the length that was the minimum dimension. If the stick fit, they could inspect.
Different c
Re:Not as interesting as the Bigelow $50 mil prize (Score:2)
Pencils, by the way, shed particulate matter that you don't want careening around your space station getting stuck in things, no matter how small the bits are.
Re:Not as interesting as the Bigelow $50 mil prize (Score:2)
Hey (Score:2, Insightful)
Hey, can I put my wife on that rocket?
Re:Hey (Score:3, Funny)
Sorry bud, it says SpaceShipOne can only carry the weight of two normal men.
Re:Hey (Score:3, Funny)
Hey, thanks! Less work for me! After you are finished, can you go in the back yard and fix the fence? I'm busy trying to overcome my video game addiction.
What about safety? (Score:4, Insightful)
The last thing we need is a catastrophic accident that causes a knee-jerk overregulation response from congress.
Re:What about safety? (Score:2)
When he claimed to have solved the roll problem, and then it rolled again, I looked for a wall to hit my head into. At least it didn't roll during the prize-winning flight....
Re:What about safety? (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, hang gliders, surfers, rock climbers, downhill mountain bikers, blue water sailers, et al do it, and die, every day.
So long as they're privately funded and aren't a danger to the general public, 'tain't nobody's business but their own.
God protect us from NerfWorld(tm).
KFG
Re:What about safety? (Score:2)
Private funding, protect us from GodWorld(tm)
NASCAR and Airshows (Score:3, Insightful)
Just yesterday, I saw on the news that during an airshow, there was a crash. Don't see congress legislating against doing hammerhead turns yet.
What I don't understand is this notion that everything must be "safe". What's important is clear information, not safety, and for people to make informed choices...
OF COURSE someone will probably sacrifice their safety ma
Re:What about safety? (Score:2)
Re:What about safety? (Score:3, Insightful)
Consider how air-travel started out - there were quite a lot of crashes initially, and it took a while before things stabilized. And in the process, we learnt a lot on how things worked.
See, until mistakes are made, there is no scope for us to learn and improve. The safest paths always lead down to stagnation
Ofcourse, I'm not saying that we need to go and let people die in the process - merely that unless we try, we would not know. Maybe we will fail occasio
Re:What about safety? (Score:3, Insightful)
This is interesting. Consider the disasters that befell both the Columbia and Challenger shuttles, while also taking into account the extensive and redundant safety precautions NASA takes with each launch.
How many redundant systems does the shuttle and associated support technology have? I once told my boss that we needed two redundant clusters to ensure that our mission-critical application that essentially runs the universit
NASA failed because of the bureaucracy (Score:3, Insightful)
One thing going about these programmes is that they are much smaller and easier to understand. The management / engineering is also correspondingly smaller so there are less likely to be issues about what a 1% chan
Re: What about safety? (Score:2)
It's not as if the pilots don't know what they're letting themselves in for; and just like movie stuntmen or bomb disposal experts or soldiers, they choose to do it anyway. Who are we to stop them?
Of course we should aim for a reasonable degree of safety; and by the time we have commercial spaceflight, there may well need to be legislation, just as for other f
Good or bad? Time will tell. (Score:4, Interesting)
"into an annual competition that might further fuel imaginations."
Yeah, like the Loebner Prize [loebner.net]?
Or maybe not [psu.edu].
Too Long Between Events (Score:3, Funny)
They need to have an X-Cup every 6 months to keep the interest alive.
A few charred remains of a failed attempt would be a real crowd pleaser too.
Just like NASCAR.
Re:Too Long Between Events (Score:2)
A few charred remains of a failed attempt would be a real crowd pleaser too. Just like NASCAR.
This is a very valid point. Maybe made in the least subtle way possible but still a valid point.
I fear the parent maybe moded down as troll. I ask those with mod points to seriously consider the validity and insightliness of the quoted comments.
Re:Too Long Between Events (Score:2)
If a couple people die trying, the audience would love it.
Make it like NASCAR - every 6 months have an X-Cup.
Repitition is important when you're trying to make a lasting impression.
Re:why have a time limit at all? (Score:2)
Best idea I've read yet.
Vehicle Challenge (Score:4, Interesting)
Develop a zero emmisions vehicle able to travel 1,000 miles, carrying 4 people, minimum distance between stops being 200 miles. No stop may last longer than 15 minutes.
This would essentially emulate a family driving in any EU or N. American country. All while driving a stake through the Oil companies hearts.
Re:Vehicle Challenge (Score:5, Informative)
Excellent idea. Pushing the boundaries of engineering and science at the same time.
All while driving a stake through the Oil companies hearts.
You have just defeated yourself.
The light-weight composites that you rely on for building your zero-emmissions car are derived from petrochemicals.
There is only one "oil" company left - Texaco. All the rest have been in the chemical market for decades.
Re:Vehicle Challenge (Score:2)
Re:Vehicle Challenge (Score:2)
Oil.
Re:Vehicle Challenge (Score:2)
Re:Vehicle Challenge (Score:2)
Re:Vehicle Challenge (Score:2)
Re:Vehicle Challenge (Score:2)
Re:Vehicle Challenge (Score:2)
Re:Vehicle Challenge (Score:2)
http://www.hawaii.gov/dbedt/ert/ethanol/
Re:Vehicle Challenge (Score:3, Informative)
Some other ethanol crops such as sugar cane work better, however sugar cane is limited to growing in semi-tropical conditions.
Re:Vehicle Challenge (Score:2)
However, even
Re:Vehicle Challenge (Score:2)
Do your own challenge then (Score:4, Insightful)
The hype that the X-Prize creates will hopefully get a lot of people interested in the flights,
which are cheap by comparison ($3k for a dozen parabolics).
If you want a new contest for emission free vehicles, organize it yourself.
Re:Vehicle Challenge (Score:2)
A 15,000km 40day world record tour of Canada and the US.
http://midsun.uwaterloo.ca/tour/tour_news/ [uwaterloo.ca]
And proud to say it was my university that did it.
Juuuust about here. (Score:2)
http://www.evuk.co.uk/hotwires/rawstuff/art24.h t ml
Anyway, who wants to drive 1000 miles per day. Any more than abou
Accidents (Score:2)
Novelty will wear off (Score:3, Insightful)
Whadya think? (Score:2)
No seriously, this is really flippin' awesome. I hope it gets to be as big as they're projecting!
Next Stop, Orbit? (Score:3, Insightful)
Save money (Score:4, Funny)
This is great but ... (Score:5, Insightful)
From what I've seen or read, the solutions to the x-prize challenge have been built for that specific purpose. example being Rutans space ship was disigned to fly 100km then return safely. I think to foster more innovation the challenge itself has to become more challenging. How about an orbital flight next. Then a moon orbital. This will allow designers to build on existing designs as opposed to coming up with the best and cheapest way to fly 100km. I sort of equating it with making lynnburgs flight a yearly event
Re:This is great but ... (Score:4, Insightful)
In the longer run, it shouldn't be that hard to, say, scale SpaceShipOne up to where it can carry ten passengers, or to give it enough crossrange capability to reach New York.
Re:This is great but ... (Score:3, Interesting)
Carmack's Armadillo team are working with hydrogen peroxide monopropellant engines. Although less powerful than bipropellants (eg. liquid oxygen and kerosene), these might also reach orbit if enough stages and/or boosters are used. They've probably still got a better s
Re:This is great but ... (Score:4, Informative)
You know why they're using such lousy engines? Because they're cheap and easy to build and operate. They limit their performance potential, essentially, to a run at the X-prize. These are not craft that are designed to scale.
What, exactly, are they going to carry over - The ship's computer? I mean, seriously, few people ever state *what* they expect to carry over, apart from "experience". Yeah, experience with an epoxy craft burning rubber are really going to help you design a turbopump-driven biprop (or whatnot) with a thermal protection system.
Safety? (Score:4, Interesting)
Furthermore, having prizes for things like "most passengers" just smacks of safety issues.
Even SpaceshipOne was almost lost on one of its flights. This isnt trivial, things can and will go wrong, and its a very unforgiving environment.
Now if people accept the risks and are willing to go regardless, I respect that. But what I dont want is a bunch of bad press for space travel, and resulting overregulation and fear among the public, resulting from a slew of fatalities at the X Prize Cup.
Re:Safety? (Score:2)
Re:Safety? (Score:2)
People will lay it on the line for things they believe in. To do otherwise invites stagnation.
Re:Safety? (Score:2, Interesting)
Sounds cool, but... (Score:5, Interesting)
Just getting to space is nice, but I'd like to see bigger prizes for things like orbital flight, rather than reccuring smaller prizes for doing the same old thing a little bit better than the last guy.
I can imagine a cool concept for the X-Prize version 4.0 (or thereabouts).
Pay some space agency to launch a tiny satelite, just a transponder with a n-million dollar check rolled up inside. The first private team to go up and retrieve it in person keeps it.
Re:Sounds cool, but... (Score:5, Funny)
Wonderful idea! (Score:5, Insightful)
The other reason I think it's a great idea is because even though Spaceship One got their first, it won't ever go much further. That design was designed for one thing, to win the X prize. A modified version of it will never go anywhere useful. Some of the other X prize contestants could concievably scale all the way to orbit. So that way, setting the bar a bit higher each year is a great way of getting maximum development of the space industry for the prize dollars offered. If we ran this prize several years in a row, each time higher, I'm certain that Spaceship One wouldn't be able to hold on to the cup.
I wonder who would be next?
Re:Wonderful idea! (Score:2)
Why not a rocket jumping contest? (Score:4, Funny)
Let's honor James Doohan, aka "Scotty". (Score:5, Interesting)
Also, let's be a bit more ambitious. With the recent revelation that the American military is working on anti-matter weapons, we can safely conclude that we have "found" the fuel necessary for intergalactic travel. An matter-antimatter engine would have almost limitless power.
So, instead of merely "shooting for low-earth orbit", let's "shoot for the stars". Let's "boldly go where no man has gone before ..."
Re:Let's honor James Doohan, aka "Scotty". (Score:2)
I think there are plenty more ACTUAL ENGINEERS that would deserve the honor before an actor playing an engineer. But beyond that, the more obvious choice than Scotty would be Gene Roddenberry.
Re:Let's honor James Doohan, aka "Scotty". (Score:2)
only in scifi land. the "power" isn't exactly the only problem in moving between the.. um.. how should I put this.. HUGE distances between STARS, not to mention the distances between galaxies.
(besides.. using something for bo
Take the Hint (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Take the Hint (Score:2)
I absolutely agree - people love challenges. It's also apparent that private industry might be better suited (more agile) at this than public institutions. Congress couldn't finish debating the financing before someone else would have completed the task.
An interesting historical note, these kinds of competitions were popular in the 20's and 30's to spur aviation development. Quite a bit of the money was put up my newspaper owners.
Re:Take the Hint (Score:2)
sometimes mentioned even on slashdot.
Up the Ante (Score:3, Interesting)
The big O? (Score:2, Funny)
You really think a bunch of geeks would be successful in a contest to have their "rockets" reach the big O?
This year's X-Prize nominees are: (Score:5, Funny)
Pros and Cons (Score:2, Interesting)
An annual contest makes sense (Score:5, Informative)
First steps to [enter space fantasy here] (Score:2, Interesting)
We can expect to see fatalities, but what great exploration didn't?
He predicted where space will finally be commercialized: tourism, travel, ads, what-have you. Eventually, we'll mine in space. One example is 03 (oxygen three). This is a major proponent to fusion. Another prediction is the drive for a space race, the fastest and the furthest into space.
We may come to expect a few fata
Re:First steps to [Uranus] (Score:2)
People have however talked about Helium-3 [google.com], which can be used in fusion reactions, giving minimal nasty radioactive by-products. Some people think that the moon's surface is covered with the stuff due to years of bombardment by the solar wind. The costs of extracting it, however, may be prohibitive.
They left out the most important category... (Score:5, Interesting)
They should push the envelope (Score:2, Interesting)
No windows? (Score:2, Insightful)
One of the big reasons TV doesn't look realistic is that we can't change our focus between the foreground and the background -- but everyth
No further contests needed for incentive (Score:2)
The fact that the company buying the rights to the basic design already has hundreds of $1,000 deposits on an estimated $100,000 trip is PLENTY of incentive for further imagination.
Space challenges... (Score:2, Interesting)
As far as i know, the russian non-tripulated ships are the best for material sending (cost effective that it)...
So there is now real need for a maned ship that can transport the crew of the space station...
(of course... after that, the next step would be a private space station).
Open Source Key to Cheap Access to Space (Score:2)
Re:Once a year??? (Score:2)
Re:Once a year??? (Score:2)
Re:yearly? (Score:2)