FAA Releases Requirements for Space Tourism 87
An anonymous reader writes "Due to companies such as Virgin Galactic, SpaceX, and Benson Space (SpaceDev) announcing their commercial spaceflight ambitions, the FAA has just released space flight requirements for safety and experimental permits. Virgin Galactic has already received nearly 200 bookings while Benson Space just recently started accepting reservations, although they plan to be first. The companies desire to have tourists in space as early as 2008 or 2009. All that it takes is a spare two hundred thousand dollars, and maybe a little courage."
Who cares? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Also, why are these laws exactly necessary? Honestly, FCC?
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Re:Who cares? (Score:5, Insightful)
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I care because this means that I may be able to go to space in my lifetime.
I don't care because if I'm going to space, the FAA rules will not affect me.
Screw you guys, I'm going to outer space!
Here we go again. (Score:5, Informative)
This is, yet again, why I can't stand
The FAA regulations are good. They were well thought out, in careful consultation with the parties involved.
They require things like informing passengers about the risks, and obtaining written consent. They clarify the liabilities and responsibilities of parties involved. They require insurance based on the maximum-probable loss resulting from operations.
They don't impose a massive paperwork burden. They allow the participants to assume great risk, while mandating some basic, sane, minimum standards, and they aim to mimimize (not eliminate) the risk to uninvolved third parties.
The commercial spaceflight companies wanted these rules. They provide a well-defined regulatory environment. If you're building a rocketship that will be carrying people, you want to know roughly for what you can be sued or thrown in jail.
Oops, sorry. I recant. Our elected Federal government enacted regulations. That must hurt pioneering development and be bad. I forgot.
Re:Here we go again. (Score:5, Funny)
They allow the participants to assume great risk, while mandating some basic, sane, minimum standards, and they aim to mimimize (not eliminate) the risk to uninvolved third parties.
Like shoe checks and no liquids since they might be parts of binary explosives.
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No, those regulations aren't due to the FAA. They're due to Vaterlandssicherheit^W Homeland Security.
Its the liability (Score:4, Insightful)
These rules are driven by politics, not by sound engineering. Most of the people making the rules probably don't know enough about flying to fold a paper airplane.
What the rules provide - that is of greatest interest to big companies - is liability protection. If a company kills people or destroys property, but they can point to laws and say that they were acting within the law, their liability is decreased, or at least limited.
All other things being equal, most companies do not want any government agency to tell them what to do. But with the current lawsuit-happy culture that we have, they can't get the necessary venture capital unless they can demonstrate limits to liability. At this stage, before there are paying customers, venture capital is the primary if not sole source of funding.
( And, yes, the rules will probably hurt development. Remember, this is the same government that thought that it was a good idea to put a teacher into a problem-plagued shuttle, and that thinks that terrorists use hair gel. )
Re:Its the liability (Score:5, Informative)
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Actually things will prevent this fantasy from coming true.
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Russian flights are orbital flights. Virgin will only shoot people 100 km up, without giving them the required 8 km/sec sideways velocity.
The two are vastly different and, as you can guess, Virgin's job is much easier. That's why it cost 100x less. And that's way you'll still need the Russians (or a Shuttle) if you want to go to the ISS.
Re:Who cares? (Score:4, Insightful)
What I DO care about are the things I didn't see in that article. Like what people can leave up there, and where they can go. The most significant part of getting something into space is accelerating it to 17,000 miles per hour. The rest, all the computers and airtight boxes full of people and fire extinguishers to stop the people catching fire, is just garnish.
Now, aside from tourists and science experiments that are probably important but don't really affect me, the space around earth is cluttered with two things - communications satellites and debris. The communications satellites are absolutely essential for modern technology to work. I imagine you'll be using at least one as you read this sentence. The other one, the debris, is a big issue. It's small rocks, and bits and pieces of old rockets, and satellites that ran out of fuel and were moved out of their orbit to a less important one to clear the way for a new satellite. These rocks and bits of metal are all still moving at 17,000 miles per hour - the have to be, in order to stay in their orbits.
When the debris hits anything important, the important thing stops being important and becomes more debris. Fortunately, that doesn't happen very often. NASA keeps track of all the biggest chunks, and keeps satellites and space stations out of the way. They just accept the risks posed by the stuff too small to track, since space is quite large and the chances of one hitting something important are acceptably small. However, if private companies start throwing things into space and don't bring it all down, the debris is going to become overwhelming, and space will become absolutely useless for communications, navigation, science, AND tourists. We'd also be trapped on Earth and unable to explore other planets until we can come up with a way to clear the debris, or just wait a few million years for it to clear up naturally.
Personally, I like the internet, cell phones, GPS, and pictures of Mars. I'd like to keep space as free of debris as possible, and I'd really like to see regulations governing what can be left in orbit and where.
Re:Who cares? (Score:4, Interesting)
So, at least for this first generation of vehicles, there's no real worry about space collisions. These rules are more aimed at dealing with things like participant awareness of the risks, and protecting the uninvolved public. Both very important things, and fortunately AST (the branch of the FAA in charge of space flight stuff) is taking a very sane and reasonable approach to most of this.
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Re:Its dead Jim. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Wrong (Score:3, Interesting)
Civil aviation was well on its way before the original FAA type organisation was constituted and it took years before it learned how to be come a red tape type organization. In that case of space filght, no learning curve is required.
1924 - regular scheduled flights are started along the Transcontinental Route.
1925 - The Kelly Air Mail Act puts the Post Office out of the flying business. Specific segments of the air mail routes are put out for bid. The early airlines are formed as contract mail carr
One more (Score:2)
Limited competition (Score:2)
Now because the industry is less regulated, you can get a ticket across the US for VERY cheap compared to 20-30 years ago.
Less government regulation is actually a good thing because it allows the free market to do its thing and uses capitalism as a vehicle for progress.
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Thanks,
Mike
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I think what you mean is that there are 1/3rd as many MAJOR carriers, and that might be true. However the amount of smaller airlines and regionals have increased exponentially. And of course there are many more ch
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Highlights? (Score:2)
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I have the courage (Score:5, Funny)
If it's worth it to you, it's really not that hard (Score:2)
I could- if I pared my life down to the BONE, set aside 30-40k a year right now...
I'd have it then, in 5-6ears.. my kids would not go to college, and I'd miss things like tv and chocolate...
but it's not beyond most of the slashdot demographics I'll wager- if thats ALL you want...
Re:If it's worth it to you... (Score:3, Funny)
If you want it to BE the only tour you ever do, try a U.S. Shuttle: the odds are still higher than a private flight and, everything going your way, they'll build a neat monument to you somewhere and schoolchildren will cry.
I can't wait (Score:5, Funny)
Prime Directive? (Score:2, Funny)
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Um, why would they launch from the US? (Score:2)
Offshoring leisure pursuits... (Score:2, Interesting)
Similarly, it's much cheaper to go diving in certain countries. But when you're 80 ft down and realize you're swimming in dangerous shark-infested waters and you're not even sure if your rasta pilot is going to wait for you to resurface before he heads back to the beach for more weed... was the money-saved worth it?
In the case of the original topic, the regulations don't appear that they would be much different than tho
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FUD, FUD, FUD (Score:2, Insightful)
Airlines and pilots need to have licenses and permits.
So what's the big hassle here?
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Please see: http://www.faa.gov/about/office_org/headquarters_o ffices/ast/licenses_permits/media/14cfr3-400.pdf/ [faa.gov]
And I quote:
Excellent - my tax`dollars at work again (Score:1, Flamebait)
Excellent - my tax`dollars at work again. I know this will benefit myself and my family.
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rj
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I understand your point, but I would bet that liability insurance and other potential legal recourse, plus the desire to stay in business and make a profit would vastly surpass anything that the FAA could make up.
Going to space is not trivial. Its not cheap, and even though everybody wants to go, in reality its only going to be people with money that are going to do it, and the
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rj
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Actually, the FAA regs are a direct part of that. They create a known, rational regulatory environment. Ever wonder why, with all the opportunities available in (say) the former Soviet Union, lots of investment capital keeps flowing to the uS and Europe? In no small part because we have well-established regulations, a judicial infrastructure, and the oft-maligned rule of law. It's safer for money to liv
Telemetry (Score:3, Interesting)
Boy, they have a lot of misplaced faith.
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True. Because we all know how many space vehicles have been saved by last-minute operator adjustments during liftoff and final descent.
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Reminds me of a video I saw recently where an executive touted her new plan to have 0 hours MTTR written into SLAs in the future. We all had a hearty laugh.
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Well, I don't know if I could meet all of these requirements, but if this is one of them, I'll be happy to take the test as often as necessary.
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Requirement (Score:1)
It's as if millions of geeks cried out... (Score:3, Funny)
Requirement #42.(a): No person who has ever held a slashdot account shall be allowed to travel in space.
Space Terrorist? (Score:1)
You know it's only a matter of time.
Will the one way ticket be the tip off?
Seems reasonable enough (Score:3, Informative)
The requirements seem reasonable enough. Under the Commercial Space Launch Amendments Act of 2004, the FAA isn't allowed to regulate early stage commercial space travel that heavily. It's accepted that this is a high risk activity, and everybody involved has to be so notified and sign an acceptance of that.
The requirements are all rather low. No physical exam is required for passengers, although one is recommended. Pilots and crew just have to pass a class 2 physical exam, not even the class 1 physical required of airline pilots or the even tougher physicals for military pilots. The pilot has to have just a commercial instrument rating and training on the specific vehicle. An ATR, let alone supersonic flight experience, is not required. There was much discussion over that one. If the spacecraft is a ballistic capsule launched on a rocket and landed by parachute, pilot qualifications don't matter much. If it's an upper stage that reenters the atmosphere on wings, the pilot has to be really good. (Chuck Yeager had his worst accident doing that and had to eject.)
First parsed as - (Score:1)
Under 18 Need Not Apply (Score:2)
Bruce
Please remove your shoes... (Score:2)
In TSA speak, this means: no liquids/gels over 3.5 oz; please remove your shoes and prepare for you cavity search.