Space Planes to Meet 'Big Demand' For Tourism 107
Mab_Mass writes "Widespread space tourism is getting closer to reality, reports the BBC. In fact, Aerospace company EADS sees that sector of the tourism market being so lucrative that it will need a 'production line' of rockets to satisfy the needs of rich travelers. '[EAD's] market assessment suggests there would be 15,000 people a year prepared to part with some 200,000 euros (£160,000) for the ride of a lifetime. [EADS subsidiary] Astrium anticipates it be will be producing about 10 planes a year.'"
Safety (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Safety (Score:4, Insightful)
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They also didn't have the potential to take out an entire city block upon crashing. Nor were these "tourists" expecting a safe ride. Nor were they largely people with enough money that I think you'd have to be an idiot to think that a simple waiver would be a open-and-shut way to
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Frankly, in the early days the conflict will be between adventure tourists wanting to do risky things (like "space travel"), and the space lines wanting to minimise risk to maximise reputation.
The passengers are rich, who cares? (Score:1)
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[J]
EasyRocket.com (Score:3, Funny)
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IIRC the high end of estimates under the 'cap and trade' system is $100/ton, WP [wikipedia.org] says this thing weighs 18tons all up.
Considering just the rocket stage: Lets be pessimistic and say 15 tons of GHG at 200eu/ton gives 3000eu, divided by (say) 15 passengers is 200eu 'carbon tax' on top of a 200keu sticker price.
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Attract thrill seekers with the mundane? (Score:4, Interesting)
Unfortunately, they found that they could make more money by attracting more visitors. And they did. But in the process they built tons of highrise hotels and turned quiet surftown Waikiki into the bustling tourist trap it now is. In order to attract more visitors, they destroyed the reason to be a visitor in the first place.
I'm sure someone will want to ride an over-priced airplane comfortably into space. But I'm not sure that those people are the same ones who would shell out millions to fly in today's ramshackle space carts.
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Re:Attract thrill seekers with the mundane? (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't understand the moral superiority that some people have when they declare it's ok for them to visit places, but not other people. A bit like people who insist on calling themselves "travellers" rather than "tourists". You're all outsiders visiting a place. Perhaps if you and your friends hadn't visited Waikiki a local guy (or another outsider) wouldn't have had the brainwave to throw up the first highrise hotel. By you going there such folks realised more money could be made.
I'm not necessarily saying it's a good or bad thing you or other people visit out of the way places (in many cases locals might be happy for people to visit and spend money) but I question this moral high ground angle that somehow your actions were positive whereas everybody else's visit is negative. Seems like snobbery to me.
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While I happen to agree with your sentiment, and your annoyance at the moral superiority the "I was here first, man, before it was popular" BS with which I am too oft assaulted, there is something to be said for the natural human inclination to ruin whatever "lost paradise" we find. And i
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Said in complete jest, of course. I enjoy the simple pleasure of a tiny Ryokan or Minshuku over the mega onsen resort hotels which is the Japanese domestic equivalent of Waikiki. One of my best trips included sharing a bottle of sake with a small ryokan proprietor beside the traditional fireplace near the genkan.
Chichijima is probably on the path of the July 2009 total eclipse so I wouldn't doubt it's going to get crowde
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Just because they both deal with "space" doesn't mean that they're optimizing toward the same thing. These joyrid
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But I don't believe the important thing here is the technical point - the ability to build orbital vehicles exists in the public sector because NASA's and others orbital rockets are built by public companies.
What is important here is the marketing and the market.
If they can turn a profit from getting people to the edge
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No, it is not. With a cryogenic biprop liquid propellant the X1's engine, at the very least, was far more capable of scaling to orbit (although even the X1 essentially required starting over. It was, for the most part, a data gathering project). SS1's entire propulsion system, which makes up the majority of the craft, would have to undergo a complete from-scratch redesign (unless they wanted to OTRAG it, w
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I really was trying to say it's technical capabilities and specification rather than it's technology per-se, as you point out its engine does have issues in that scaling, however my understanding is that the spaceframe is significantly more advanced than the X1 - and it's capable of carrying more passengers. So there
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The data is *already gathered*. The proper term is, "reinventing the wheel".
Even if it doesn't the sum total of human knowledge is going up by this endeavour.
In what regard? There's no new knowledge being generated by having, proportionally, a very *gentle and easy* flight envelope. If you think that each company has to reinvent the wheel f
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"that's what you hire experienced rocketry engineers for."
not if:
1) they've all retired
2) Their experience don't apply to your technology/aims
3) They have a set of presumptions that mean that they
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Really? Because the X33 was such a success with it's carbon fibre tanks? Name me one sucessful carbon fibre tank or even a carbon fiibre support structure used in an orbital vehicle.
1) The X33's problem with carbon fibre tanks was that they had to be built *exceedingly light*. These weren't ordinary tanks; they were an extremely fine honeycomb structure, nothing at all like what SS1 used.
2) What was being
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Except, of course, that supersonic aircraft flight is the first step towards air-breathing rockets. Being able to use the atmosphere as reaction mass and perhaps
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As I said, supersonic aircraft flight is the first neccessary step towards airbreathing rockets. If Virgin Galactic is doing something related to supersonic aircrafts, it is doing something related to airbreathing rockets. An airbreathing rocket is indistinguishable from a hypersonic airbreathing aircraft.
The only supersonic aircrafts currently in service are the military ones, and the design goals
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No, it isn't. It is doing *absolutely nothing* relative to airbreathing rockets. I'm doing as much relative to airbreathing rockets by driving my car as Virgin Galactic is doing.
An airbreathing rocket is indistinguishable from a hypersonic airbreathing aircraft.
Which Virgin Galactic *is not*.
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Let's see, we are talking about EADS, so this would mean most likely expanding the ESA launch site at Kourou to allow for the bigger people-carriers. More tourism to get to the launch site, perhaps more resorts for the entourage such a rich tourist would bring, paparazzi, and so on. So much for the little tropic location.
What about space junk? That could also ruin a tourist flight if it meant pollution from
It's fun to be first ... but ? (Score:1)
pay to fly in the vomit comet ?
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Can you hear me Major Tom? (Score:2, Interesting)
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Where as astronaunts spend days in space, doing something that one hopes (given the costs involved) is at least somewhat important.
I hope they look like DC-8s (Score:4, Funny)
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Nice first step (Score:5, Insightful)
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Talking about energy efficiency and carbon footprint, this would rather be a "very good backward step".
Anyway, I'm sure some dumbass wil have the idea to put biofuel in it, add 2m of photovoltaic panels and call it "the first green rocket ever!"
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If anyone is inclined to mod me a troll for contradicting facts well established in "Star Trek", please at least have integrity to respond with a counter-argument.
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(Huh? What are these terms, "ISP", "TPS", "many times the delta-V", "payload fraction", and "geometric size scaling" of which you speak? That's not how rockets in any TV
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Hopefully this technology will bring high-altitude hig
Not to ruin the ride.. (Score:2, Insightful)
Don't go on a roller coaster then... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Not to ruin the ride.. (Score:4, Insightful)
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Eh... I doubt it. If you're sitting up when the craft is level, then when its rocketing towards space you'll be lying on your back. 4.5 gees isn't all that much in that direction. While others pointed out that rollercoasters have more gees, clearly it's going to be a much longer experience what with the craft traveling at least a hundred kilometers instead of half a mile.
Remember the Concorde (Score:3, Interesting)
And yet any ticket for a near future spaceplane will likely cost a hundred times more than did a Concorde seat. Increases in fuel costs might make it even more expensive than that. And just think of the even more stringent security screening bullshit passengers will have to endure.
Summary: Show me a commercially viable SST first. Then we can talk about a spaceplane that's not a welfare program for the aerospace industry.
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Different Economic Models (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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The Concorde, and the U.S. lunar program, were done for reasons of national pride. Among piss-poor reasons to spend government funds, that's got to be near the top. Britain and France would've been better off in every way if not for Concorde and the commercialization of space probably would've occurred in the 1970's if not for the the U.S. lunar landing program. I don't think any other political response w
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"To go where no man has gone before" is a nice, romantic tag-line for a cheesy television program but it's not what drives exploration and discovery. The motivating force for exploration has always been the all-mighty buck and you can see in the stagnation of the exploration of space how pivotal the profit motive is. No profit, no warp drives.
mod this true +42 please, or at least insightful +1 if no true +42 button gets installed in the meantime
And let's get rid of the moronic "Outer Space" treaty so there would be an incentive to actually explore the outer space, not just "search for life on other planets" and "go where no man has gone before".
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The Concorde, and the U.S. lunar program, were done for reasons of national pride. Among piss-poor reasons to spend government funds, that's got to be near the top.
eh I'd rather pay for that than to send YOUR kids to school or YOUR cancer treatment or to pay the social security that the old people I know use to go to Hawaii every year.
Think about that Mr. "Wah wah it could be used for Ed or Health or bettering humanity" Man! (Apologies if you are just generally against Gov spending)
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For a start too much of the British identity these days seems to be ASBOs and Big Brother and Asylum seekers and house price rises.and other rubbish. American identity seems to be gung-ho invade-istan Jingoism, or flat out racism and segregation.
However look at something like the gulf states and they're building some impressive things for national pride (that ridiculously tall hotel on the beach spring
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Talk about rubbish. Have you ever been to the US? I don't know anybody who's thrilled about the wars in the Middle East, and even supporters (which include myself) view the Iraq war as a necessary evil. I see a lot more "blame America first" people than people you'd consider Jingoists.
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Well I can only look from the outside in since I am not american, but the impression I get is of a country that does look at the atrocities it commits (Iraq and guantanamo bay spring to mind) and doesn't learn - they see these as a necessary evil rather than seeing it as so
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Nice spin there. But the SST was promoted as a commercially viable aircraft with a short turn-around. It was to make flights to Asia and the Pacific convenient and affordable and the North Atlantic a commuter run.
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Not only because it's there, but because it's beautiful and inspiring. Machines like the Apollo, the Saturn V and the Concorde are very effective statements of what Man can achieve.
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That is debatable, BA used Concorde to get corperate accounts by agreeing to a certain number of upgrades to it, these are the people who ar booking flexible business class tickets and so generate huge profits for the airline. Of course it is very difficult to put a quantive figure on how much of an effect this had
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whats that, you do it because you can? thank you very much you just answered your own question.
It's not that simple (Score:2)
So "commercially viable" is a bit mis-leading, when the only thing that made it non-viable was "not in my back yard" regulatio
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The Concorde had a pair of sisters: the US SST by Boeing and the Soviet Tu-144 by Tupolov. The former was canned after an incredible expenditure of taxpayer dollars, and the latter never made any kind of a profit. Although, the Tu-144 may have fared better if the effort hadn't been hindered by the British and French (allegedly) passing known bad technical data to Soviet industrial spies.
The point is not that a spaceplane is undesirable; the point i
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Why would passengers be screened more? I imagine in a lot of cases, the only type of "security screening" will be a form absolving the vehicle operator from most forms of liability and maybe a few days of training.
Numbers? (Score:2)
So, that is 1500 people per plane? Seems there is some magic going on with their projections (market assesments)...
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Now let's just wait for the ensuing bust.
It may be relevant that there have actually been no sub-orbital tourists yet. So far they're all expecting a "space voyage", and I don't think that the realism has set in yet that this is Alan Shepherd scale, not John Glenn. They're paying a pile of bucks for only a few minutes of real flight and weightlessness - while strapped into a seat.
I'd save any investment until we see how word-of-mouth evaluations loo
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Ok, let's get this straight (Score:1)
The fundamental problem is that all these private space ships only have a fraction of the energy required to achieve orbital flight. As the rocket equation [wikipedia.org] shows the energy cost of any self-propelled space vehicle is exponential. The only way to solve this problem is to create a propulsion system that doesn't have
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'No wireless, less space than a nomad, Lame.'
Tourists won't care about orbital flight, they just want to see the world from space, and experience weightlessness - from the bookings for Virgin Galactic etc, it seems there are enough people interested to make it viable. Orbital will come much later because it's much more expensive
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Do you think CmdrTaco cringes every time that's repeated?
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Rockets are not expensive because of the energy costs. That's the cheap part. They're expensive because of parts and especially all of the labor [thespacereview.com] -- both for reusable and disposable stages. Labor can indeed be reduced through proper system design. That's why SpaceX's launch pricing is so low. From start to finish, a major driving principle was, "how can we design our rockets an
Yeah, but the 2 are not incompatable (Score:2)
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No, because there's no way I or many people could afford that even if they thought it was worth every Euro-cent. But at a quite substantial but at least feasible cost of say $20k US, personally I'd start saving up the coin. And if the small number of people willing to pay EU 200k allows further cost reductions, it may happen.
The fundamental problem is that all these private space ships only have a fraction of th
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Probably have to save a bit more than that. Heck, you need $20K just for a MIG-29 flight.
The sad part is that these are joy rides. (Score:3, Insightful)
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Well,.... (Score:2)
Tourism to where? (Score:2)
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Terrific... (Score:1)
+3/-5 G's: sounds like an exclusive club (Score:2)
Oblig: Freeside Rental (Score:1)
this is not a SST analogy (Score:1)