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ISS NASA Space

SpaceX Capsule Returns To Earth With Lab Results 60

An anonymous reader writes SpaceX's unmanned Dragon spacecraft has splashed down in the Pacific Ocean carrying NASA cargo and scientific samples from the International Space Station. A boat is ferrying the spacecraft to a port near Los Angeles, where NASA said the 1.5 tons of materials will be removed and returned to the space agency by late tomorrow for scientists to pick apart. "This mission enabled research critical to achieving NASA's goal of long-duration human spaceflight in deep space," said Sam Scimemi, director of the International Space Station division at NASA headquarters.
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SpaceX Capsule Returns To Earth With Lab Results

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  • Comment removed (Score:3, Interesting)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday October 26, 2014 @10:47AM (#48234169)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by SuricouRaven ( 1897204 ) on Sunday October 26, 2014 @10:58AM (#48234211)

      The problem appears to be a lack of profitability. There's just nothing to do for money in space beyond geostationary orbit. It's just a big empty nothing, in the most literal way possible. The only resource to be had is energy, which is cheaper to make down on earth. There are potentially valuable rocks far away, but no economically-viable means of getting at them. The ISS is doing some useful research, but it's not there to run a profit. The only reason any private enterprise would want to go into space is to run a satelite or because someone in government is footing the bill for science or military purposes.

      Suborbital transport would be nice, but you're looking at a very limited market - the only advantage over first-class flights on a conventional aircraft is trip time, and who has enough money to pay that much extra to save a few hours? If that business model was viable, Concorde would have been updated and continued.

      • by Applehu Akbar ( 2968043 ) on Sunday October 26, 2014 @11:32AM (#48234365)

        Space tourism has emerged as an unexpected market, at the same time as the increasing difficulty of mining on Earth is leading to interest in extracting valuable minerals from asteroids. And the more satellites we put into orbit, the more servicing is needed to maintain them. Meanwhile, NASA finds itself, perhaps intentionally, with no domestic way of getting astronauts and material into LEO. Why not exploit this opportunity to develop and sell both materials ferries and manned craft? Once the private sector develops a man-rated craft, there will be no limits to what we can do.

        • Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)

          by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday October 26, 2014 @11:43AM (#48234419)
          Comment removed based on user account deletion
          • Space tourism has emerged as an unexpected market

            Even if a space tourism market exists, there is no guarantee it will survive. A Concorde market existed and it went bust nonetheless.

            This is always my argument about suborbital travel. It is not seriously faster than Concorde was, and Concorde was so hideously expensive to operate that even the elite could not keep it going. Until there is a revolution in air travel that enables hypersonic flight at current prices, suborbital travel will not become a thing.

            • by Kjella ( 173770 )

              This is always my argument about suborbital travel. It is not seriously faster than Concorde was, and Concorde was so hideously expensive to operate that even the elite could not keep it going.

              That's something of a misrepresentation, the elite never lacked the money and the rich have only gotten richer so it was more that they wouldn't than that they couldn't. Improved communication lowered the demand to send bigwigs between Europe and the US, I imagine the ~2*4 hours saved on a business trip was a key selling feature for the Concorde. That's fast but video conferencing is even faster. As for leisure travel I think the standard has gone up, travelling first class on a subsonic plane can be quite

            • >Until there is a revolution in air travel that enables hypersonic flight at current prices, suborbital travel will not become a thing.

              I don't follow - would not suborbital flights obviate the need for hypersonic ones? You get to your destination faster, and spend most of your travel time is spent in near-vacuum where concepts like "hypersonic" and "air resistance" are largely irrelevant.

              • Yes, but to get out of the atmosphere you need to be going hypersonic speeds. Today it can only be done with rockets. In the 90's Aerospike egines was supposed to make hypersonic, suborbital and even SSTO flights possible. There is no commercially produced Aerospike engine yet.

                • Not at all, you only need to be going hypersonic speeds within the atmosphere if you are assuming a ballistic path or only air-breathing engines - there's no reason a winged plane couldn't climb to the edge of the atmosphere at relatively sedate speeds before beginning serious acceleration. The only reason orbital launches don't do such a thing is they need ~20x as much energy to get to orbital speeds as they do to get to altitude, and no plane can carry that kind of weight. A sub-orbital rocket plane wou

          • by 0123456 ( 636235 )

            Even if a space tourism market exists, there is no guarantee it will survive. A Concorde market existed and it went bust nonetheless.

            Concorde wasn't a destination, it was a way to get there. And it was still doing OK until 9/11. AFAIR, it was finally killed when the manufacturer refused to support such old hardware any more.

            The only question about space tourism is how fast we can ramp down the cost and ramp up safety. If anyone could go into space for a week for a few thousand dollars with no more risk of dying than a modern cruise liner, there'd be a vast market.

        • Space tourism at even 250,000 dollars a flight has a really limited market.

          Until we can get the cost per pound into orbit down to a couple of dollars space tourism isn't going anywhere. private enterprises aren't really going to take off. We need radical engine and power designs.

      • by Teancum ( 67324 )

        You nailed the idea that it is economics that impacts spaceflight, but it really is the marginal cost of getting anywhere which is part of the equation. The other part is the legal ability to do anything in space is also similarly limited... by virtue of the Outer Space Treaty and the sentiments behind the Moon Treaty.

        In other words, it is far more than simply valuable rocks too far away without the means to get them. It is also getting those rocks and having them immediately confiscated when you bring th

    • Yeah the thing about (the modern American) ardent libertarian is that they are usually utterly, 180 degrees wrong. It's sort of like teaching Ayn Rand in a undergrad philosophy class on ethics or even metaphysics - it has no place to be taken seriously

      Those in power... you mean the people when their representation still had a modicum of integrity?

      Honestly - one non-sequitur leap to another - what is it that you are saying?
      • by khallow ( 566160 )
        Funny how saying "libertarian" causes some people to stop thinking.

        Those in power... you mean the people when their representation still had a modicum of integrity?

        Of course not. He's no doubt instead referring to bureaucrats, politicians, and businesses able to sell access for wealth and opportunity. I doubt most people feel the urge to fantasize that sort of power doesn't exist just because there is a "modicum of integrity" and someone said "libertarian".

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Well, SpaceX (and other launch providers) do have paying customers besides NASA in the communications industry, and there are also companies that pay to launch smaller satellites (e.g. CubeSats) in the "mass margin" of bigger launches. Earth observation (in all spectra) is basically being revolutionized right now -- for relatively low costs, a company or university (or a consortium of the same) can launch dozens of small satellites to achieve continuous visibility of the entire Earth. The bottleneck now i

    • by Kjella ( 173770 )

      Um, looking at the list of SpaceX customers there's MDA Corp, SES, Thaicom, Orbcomm, AsiaSat with several others planned in the future so there seems to be quite a bit of private satellite business. I guess it's less newsworthy than replacing the Shuttle as we've been launching satellites for decades, but it's there. There's not much else though as the costs are too high and outside LEO/GEO/polar satellite it's all just one-off missions so far.

      What I'm hoping for is that SpaceX will eventually use their "re

    • by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Sunday October 26, 2014 @12:15PM (#48234555) Journal
      Less than 1\3 of spacex launches are us gov launches. They can now exist without them. However, NASA is speading up spacex's programs. And since these are saving America billions, it makes sense to continue.
    • by Alomex ( 148003 )

      Flynn, an ardent libertarian,

      Ardent libertarian is the term used in polite society for "emotionally immature and intellectually unsophisticated". A libertarian society replicates the current status quo in terms or taxes and tariffs but with the difference that now you have no power over the revenue collector, which is as private corporation.

      In a libertarian society I can simply refuse you to drive on my highway because I don't like your face.

      • by 0123456 ( 636235 )

        Ardent libertarian is the term used in polite society for "emotionally immature and intellectually unsophisticated".

        No, you're confusing 'libertarian' with 'liberal'.

        • by Alomex ( 148003 )

          Contrary to what you say, many studies have found that the better educated and informed you are the more likely you are to be a liberal.

          Of course it makes you feel better to state the opposite opinion as if it were a fact, which is yet another confirmation of the studies above.

          • by 0123456 ( 636235 )

            Contrary to what you say, many studies have found that the better educated and informed you are the more likely you are to be a liberal.

            Well, yes, because 'educated' people have spent years being taught liberal dogma, and being told how wonderful they are for doing so.

            'Education' has very little to do with intelligence. Quite the opposite, in most cases.

    • by TWX ( 665546 )

      Flynn, an ardent libertarian, thought that as early as the turn of the millennium, private industry would be ready to offer all kinds of spaceflight services that the general public would rush to buy, such as FedEx delivery anywhere on Earth in 90 minutes.

      Right now, there's simply no market for that kind of delivery, and launches are not able to be set-up and made in that short of a duration either.

      There's literally almost nothing on this world that is both so unique as to exist singularly and so instan

    • SpaceX has flown missions for the Canadian, Taiwanese and Turkmen space agencies, and is contracted for the new versions of both the Iridium and Orbcomm satellite networks, among numerous other commercial payloads. NASA is currently their biggest single customer, but they're rapidly losing that status (Iridium has seven launches contracted, NASA only four).

  • That's all well and good, but will they earn enough science points to unlock the next tier of equipment?

    I vote bigger rockets. All Perhaps love bigger rockets.

    • All Perhaps love bigger rockets.

      Fuck.
      You.
      Autocorrect.

      That should say "Kerbals " not Perhaps. Joke ruined.

      • I was hoping you were talking about research in Sid Meier's Alpha Centaur or Alien Crossfire. Please don't go, the drones need you, they look up to you.
  • We all know it returned with The Blob! (Or will it be the Andromeda Strain?)

He has not acquired a fortune; the fortune has acquired him. -- Bion

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