NASA Awards Space Cargo Grant 43
pha7boy writes "NASA has made a recent award of 171 million dollars to Orbital Sciences Corp. of Virginia in order to aid the company in developing a feasible space cargo delivery service. 'The US space agency intends to hold an open competition in the years ahead for actual space station cargo-delivery contracts, but Orbital of Dulles, VA, is one of two companies receiving financial help from NASA to develop their proposed systems. The other is Space Exploration Technologies of El Segundo, CA.'"
Amazing.... (Score:3, Funny)
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This is one of many (Score:5, Funny)
Okay, I'll stop for now.
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NASA has several grants for COTS technologies planned in this area. The one discussed in the article is the least specific, or the "General Grant". There is another payload specific version ("Carry Grant"), the supporting technologies version ("Foster Grant"), a southwestern cuisine delivery version ("Flay Grant"), a version to improve color definition in delivery vehicle cameras ("Hue Grant"), and probably many others.
Okay, I'll stop for now.
That was very punny, I'll grant you that...
Can my dreams of being an astronaut come true? (Score:4, Funny)
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
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Or, in short, there is simply no significant market for sending things around the globe in the a couple of hours. (At least not a market that would support the billions of investment required to create the infrastructure.)
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What's wrong with ATV? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:What's wrong with ATV? (Score:5, Informative)
It's not duplicate of the ATV: AFAIK, it's intended for very urgent deliveries of small amounts critical supplies to ISS, where the ATV is designed for long-term scheduled deliveries of large amounts of day-to-day supplies.
The two problems are similar, but complementary.
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Superguns (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.astronautix.com/lvfam/gunnched.htm [astronautix.com]
Don't want to be a spelling nazi or anything (Score:2)
And yes. Guns could be great for this.
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Murdered, he was murdered. Propably Mossad or CIA.
there are better (Score:2)
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1960s called they want their space program back (Score:5, Interesting)
You mean they are getting paid to demonstrate something like the 42 year old Soyuz? And once we have a way of delivering something to the earth's orbit, we can get ready for the big push to fly to the moon over the next 20 years or whatever. If someone in the 1960 predicted this would be the state of the US space program 50 years later, people would laugh at how ridiculously pessimistic that prediction was.
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Oh, and do I have to mention the CONSIDERABLE advantage that comes from not dealing with the russians?
Re:1960s called they want their space program back (Score:5, Insightful)
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I'm glad we are at the point where we are. I'm glad that companies like SeaLaunch and ILS are there to broker private deals on russian launch vehicles. That doesn't mean that it is an unvarnished 'good thing' to deal with them.
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Don't worry, with enough time we'll have people in Moscow going to a theme park where they can visit a fantastic land called "Russia."
Re:1960s called they want their space program back (Score:5, Insightful)
Today it's about cheaper!, cheaper!, cheaper! (no matter what the cost)
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Dominos Space Pizza (Score:2, Funny)
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Toasty (Score:1)
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And if you throw them down from the LEO, they won't cool on their way down. Coming to think of it: you could simply take the prepared raw pizza, throw it down, and let the heat of re-entry cook it. That's some time saved right there.
SpaceX (Score:3, Informative)
One would have expected NASA to opt for SpaceX http://www.spacex.com/ [spacex.com] had they really been serious about engaging private space efforts. SpaceX has made lots of progress http://www.spacex.com/updates.php [spacex.com] and has a range of boosters in the works including ones for heavy payloads http://www.spacex.com/falcon9_heavy.php [spacex.com].
But then, making a suboptimal choice seems to be in-line with NASA history. It is almost as if NASA is trying is doing its best to go slow and waste as much money in the process as possible.
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Re:SpaceX (Score:4, Informative)
OSC has proven that it can put small payloads into LEO using solid fuel boosters. For cargo delivery to the ISS, you need a system that can match orbits rather well. That means advanced avionics and more flexibility in the upper stage. For that kind of capability, SpaceX seems to be rather better positioned as their liquid-fuel engines have restart capability.
Yes, the last Falcon I launch did not deliver payload to orbit. But the failure mode was fairly innocuous: slosh in the upper-stage fuel tank together with some positive feedback. Throughout the oscillating burn the risky parts of the system (pumps, engines, guidance) performed well enough to indicate that had the engine not run dry a bit too soon because of the propellant being centrifuged to the tank sides, the burn would have been complete and on target.
The slosh issue looks like an easy fix: baffles in the tank and some changes to the thrust-vectoring software.
Re:SpaceX (Score:4, Interesting)
I'd put money on OSC's avionics. And the Minotaur IV and V use the axial thrust vectoring of the Peacekeeper missile [wikipedia.org]. Frankly, if true, that'd make the Minotaur the best rocket on the planet for placing things accurately since the Peacekeeper remains the most precise ICBM ever built. Turning Peacekeepers into space vehicles has been tried before. E'Prime [eprimeaerospace.com] attempted that in the early 90's. They got blocked by US Congress, probably at the behest of competitors.
While that is true, it is also true that SpaceX needs to put something in orbit if it wishes to stay in business.
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Re:SpaceX (Score:4, Informative)
Futurama (Score:1)
Unbalanced? (Score:2, Interesting)
In other words, the cargo inside the projectile would need to be balanced just right, or spun. Check out the rifling wikipedia article.
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Putting shite into orbit..... (Score:2)
Hmmmm Ok so here are some questions:
Killing the ISS (Score:1)