Virgin Galactic SpaceShipTwo Crashes 445
Fallen Kell writes: Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo has crashed. "'During the test. the vehicle suffered a serious anomaly resulting in the loss of the vehicle,' the company said in a statement. "The WhiteKnightTwo carrier aircraft landed safely. Our first concern is the status of the pilots, which is unknown at this time.'""
ABC says one person is dead, and another injured. This was the craft's fourth powered test flight, and its first since January.
Not a good week... (Score:4, Insightful)
Wow, with the Orbital Sciences launch failure and now this, it is really turning into a bad week for privately funded spaceflight.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Insightful)
We can't forget that space flight is a challenging, dangerous, risky affair for private industry as well as governments. It will be interesting to see how the private side deals with these setbacks.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Insightful)
That's right. People risk their lives to do adventures like this because it's worth it. Some of them become martyrs for the knowledge needed to achieve the goal. It's still sad and we are still right to ask if we could have done better, and how we can do better now.
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That's right. People risk their lives to do adventures like this because it's worth it.
This is spaceflight in definition only. It's nowhere near orbit. It's not even useful as a suborbital transportation system. If you want to perform tests in rarefied atmosphere or vacuum, sounding rockets are vastly cheaper and offer better performance. This exists for tourism, for people who want a few minutes of weightlessness all at once, rather than a several arches in a "vomit comet" a dozen seconds at a time, and for people who want to claim they technically went to space, even though most people
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Insightful)
No offense, but "the goal" was achieved decades ago. These people died for the profit of shareholders, not some "goal" of space flight which has been going on for half a century.
The goal of commercial manned spaceflight was already achieved decades ago? Odd. I seem to have missed it.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Insightful)
I am glad not everyone shares your viewpoint. This is an entire industry still in its infancy. Using a strategy like selling rich people seats so they can be the first ones up there is perfectly satisfactory to get the technology developed and bring costs down an open it up to a wider audience. It's not a zero sum game.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Insightful)
There was a time when only the rich flew and the rest of us schmucks were still sailing in boats. Your assertion is inconsistent with history.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Insightful)
Or horse carriages, or trains, or cars, radios, TVs, mobile phones, computers... pretty much anything that was "brand new tech" at some point in the past.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Interesting)
The benefits of every technical achievement went to the rich people first. From the toilet, to electric lighting, the automobile, the iPhone, etc. Every one.
Even military advances. Thanks God that it turned out, starting in the 1600-1700s that private enterprise - working independently of the aristocracies - led to wealth generation outside of the political structure. This gave societies as a whole the power to increasingly influence governments, leading to popular revolutions in America and France, and the neutering of royal power in England.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:4, Insightful)
What nonsense. Someone somewhere is designing a leafblower right now and learned something that leads to cheaper access to space. Some scientist studying bug locomotion learned something that leads to cheaper access to space.
That is how progress works. Technological "breakthroughs" are always a culmination of extremely small leaps.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Interesting)
Absent several technological breakthroughs that are each tantamount to magic - this technology doesn't scale to cheap, useful, access to space. It's pretty much limited to being a thrill ride.
No, this is just yet another problem that needs solving. Like somebody else mentioned earlier, you used to have to be pretty wealthy to be able to afford privately owned automobiles and airplanes. At that time, everything you just said applied to those as well.
I know it's the "hip" luddite/social justice thing to talk about making everything cheaper is a race to the bottom that only costs the common man his job and such, but the truth is that whole concept of being a race to the bottom itself is such a lie to begin with it's pathetic. If that notion was even remotely true, we'd have a global 90% unemployment rate by now seeing how long ago the industrial revolution was. Things being cheaper makes them more accessible to all.
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Re:Not a good week... (Score:4, Insightful)
Absent several technological breakthroughs that are each tantamount to magic
The SpaceShipTwo design already is cheap access to space for researchers who want to run experiments above 100 km. And for the thrill ride. Don't need new technology development beyond what's already been done (except it sounds like they might need a more reliable rocket).
I think you ought to learn more about what the market is for suborbital before telling us about all the magic that needs to be done.
Sure, they'll need to greatly modify the design in order to get an orbital vehicle with viable thermal protection system for return to Earth. But so what? As I've noted before, Scaled Composites has demonstrated that they can design and build such things,
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I know what the market for suborbital is - and the difference between suborbital and the usual meaning of "cheap access to space". Unlike the fanboi's, I debase the meaning so I can sneak SpaceShip Two in.
My point remains. If you don't need orbit, but merely high enough for a few minutes, then SpaceShipTwo would provide a remarkably cheap access to space.
Since they haven't designed and built an aircraft with anything even remotely resembling those performance characteristics...
SpaceShipOne being the obvious counterexample. In the highest flights, it achieved about a quarter of the delta v needed to reach space, reached a vacuum good enough that it effectively had no drag/lift, and had a rudimentary system for reentering the Earth's atmosphere. Yes, that's not orbital capability, but that is a demonstration that they have the abili
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Insightful)
"I think there is a world market for maybe five computers."
Thomas Watson, president of IBM, 1943
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"I think there is a world market for maybe five computers."
Thomas Watson, president of IBM, 1943
He did not say "I predict in the future there will only ever be five computers." He said "I think we currently have five potential customers for our computer device."
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I have discovered that a screw-shaped device such as this, if it is well made from starched linen, will rise in the air if turned quickly.
— Leonardo Da Vinci, Codice Atlantico, describing his Helical Air Screw, 1480.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Insightful)
Commercial manned spaceflights add nothing here. The ultimate goal being profit for shareholders and find a new way to waste money for the wealthier in exchange of something nobody else can buy, do. But at the end, it does not contribute anything to make this planet better.
Do those space ship designs look anything like what was previously used? Why is exploring new spaceship designs and launch mechanisms useless?
When you attack "profits", realize that it is profits that drove the creation of the computers and networks that you're typing this on, right? It is hypocritical for you to enjoy the benefits while disdaining the means.
No, I am not ready to die for my neighbor to live in space or elsewhere.
No one asked you to. On the other hand, how hard is to not shit on other people's achievements?
Re:Not a good week... (Score:4, Insightful)
Travel in suborbital space for the wealthiers accomplish nothing.
By itself no, but orbital solar power stations, asteroid mining and zero gee manufacturing would accomplish things and this helps us move in that direction.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Insightful)
I do not "attack" profits. I am just stating what this whole thing is about. Profits can also be made from doing actually useful things. Travel in suborbital space for the wealthiers accomplish nothing.
You disdained this business seeking profit by building new spaceships. As opposed to those profit-seeking businesses who sell food, or consumer tech, or cars?
Since you're have set yourself up as a judge that things need to be about making the planet better - what have you done to make this planet better? Slashdot posts don't count.
BTW, what achievements are you talking about? We have already send people to the Moon and we are routinely sending people in low orbit of the Earth. There is nothing to see here.
I guess you're not an engineer. Even a failed prototype is an achievement. Do you think successes are picked off trees or something? What do you think successful achievements are built upon? The lessons from the failures.
The test pilots were testing a new type of space vehicle. There was an immense amount of work going into a challenging problem. You are familiar with the term, "it's not rocket science", yes? They are tackling rocket science.
Please do elaborate on how you're part of the "we" who sent people to the moon or who send people into low orbit.
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Going to Six Flags for a day accomplishes nothing. Except for the personal enjoyment of the rides (contrasted against the pain of waiting in line, a poor example of anticipation buildup).
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Insightful)
Really? Because my father is currently employed by the State of New Mexico to help get Spaceport America ready. So, it's contributing to jobs, for one thing. For another, it is absolutely ESSENTIAL for humanity to expand beyond Earth if we are to survive AS A SPECIES. If you don't want to go into space, fine...fortunately for the rest of us, who understand what commercial space flight means for humanity, you get no say in any of this.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:4, Insightful)
We will not expand beyond earth in any meaningful fashion without a fundamental revolution in our understanding of the physics required to travel interstellar distances. It's really that simple.
"But the space station!" - nope, sorry. Never anything more than a scientific / research outpost.
"But the moon!" - lol no. Worse than Mars, still dead if our sun goes.
"But Mars!" - nope, sorry. That will never be anything more than a small colony requiring constant resupply from Earth. Our Sun goes, Mars goes too. Species wiped out.
"But generational starships"- nope, sorry. We can't build a Buick where the fucking bumper doesn't fall off in 3 years... we are sure as SHIT not building a spaceship that will last the literally tens of thousands of years required to travel to our nearest neighbors with orbiting planets while supporting huge amounts of life on board. Let alone the fact that there's no guarantee the planets you find on the other end of that 30,000 year flight will be habitable in any appreciable way.
Unless and until we have "Faster Than Light" travel, we are NOT going to be traveling interstellar (or intergalactic) distances with manned flights. It really is that simple, friend.
Commercial space flight does NOTHING to probe those fundamental physical boundaries. Commercial space flight is nothing more than APPLIED SCIENCE. We know enough to send people up, and bring them back down again now. We understand how it works - commercial space flight is now just tinkering with the formula trying to make it cheaper for everybody to have a thrill ride - and with our current understanding of the universe, that's literally all that orbital spaceflight will get us. Pour that money into theoretical physics if you want to eventually get humanity off this rock as a hedge against extinction. Any other expenditure is foolish.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Funny)
When the New World was discovered and colonized, it did not mean that Europe had to die off as a result. It just meant that people like you were left behind in it.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Insightful)
How do you expect to ever get there if rich people aren't funding it first? Like it or not, rich people funding novelties leads to mass production and streamlining of processes which in turn make everything cheaper for us little guys. On top of that, it's THEIR money. Why should they give a damn about your opinion on how they spend it?
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't see your point. Money is money. Do you think that Branson wants to only fly around rich people forever? His choices to get the funding from point A to point B are rich people, getting a government grant, or starting up a Kickstarter for a couple billion dollars. Or all of them put together. It's expensive. You take what you can get.
The point is to make space something that isn't going to get cancelled the next time the Congressman from Kansas (or wherever) wants to get a corn subsidy. A corn subsidy that no one needs, but makes him look good to his district.
The problem with the national programs is that there is no motive to take the next steps. They can only seem to get up the gumption to really make it matter when they need to do some old fashioned dick waving. That's why the US and USSR did it, and that is why China and India are doing it.
Commercialization isn't the only way of doing it, but commercialization is a method that does work for other products and services. It sure beats having to have a war (or a Cold War) to make some progress.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Insightful)
Did you notice that we got to space, as in actually into orbit and beyond already? As in several nations, separately with separate independent programs? Without rich people funding it?
Er, rich people did fund it, although it was in the form of taxes. Everyone else in the US and Soviet Union funded it too, because those governments shoveled nontrivial portions of their GDPs into the effort at the expense of using that money for things like reducing poverty, improving education or curing diseases.
Today, you have private companies spending their money on this effort instead, to the potential detriment of basically nobody but their own shareholders who voluntarily chose to take a risk on that investment. How can that possibly be a bad thing?
You know, the commercial aviation industry post-WWII was seen as nothing but a luxury for the "one percenters" of that day. Over time you evolved a deregulated airline market in the US that provided flight options for el cheapo travelers, first-class jet-setters and everyone in between. Maybe space flight will get there too but it doesn't do so without that first phase of being a toy for those entitled rich snobs who "just don't have the patience to take the train like the rest of us."
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Insightful)
The Wright Brothers built a plane, glider really, that would have no possible application today other than recreation.
As you surmised, it is unlikely that something like this space plane will scale out for mass usage of space flight, but its a necessary start.
Yes, we've been to the Moon courtesy of the taxpayer. And how long has it been since anyone has been back? The US is not in such bad shape that we couldn't afford to go back. The government just sees no benefit *to them* in doing so. The people themselves have other concerns. Been there, done that.
If some rich people have the ability to fund a vision beyond what is right in front of them, then thank goodness for rich people. Some rich people, anyway. At least they are using their money for something more useful than snorting cocaine, starting wars, and fixing elections.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Insightful)
Cheap access to space is a pretty damned worthy goal, regardless of profit.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Insightful)
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That was quite an illuminating rebuttal.
Going into space is not like air travel. It costs a lot of money per pound, it's a vacuum, it's cold, and there's radiation. We already see permanent health damage from astronauts on the ISS after only six months. It's not that there are technological challenges to be solved, it's that some of these problems have no solution. Ever.
This isn't a matter of discovering Bernoulli's principle, it's a matter of discovering a new power source, or a way to defeat gravity, neither of which are likely to happen any time soon.
I'm sorry to dispel your childish notions of space travel for everyone, but it just isn't going to happen in your lifetime. Space travel will never be economical enough for anyone but governments, and it will never be profitable. Thus, I laugh at people like Elon Musk, who is just a 13 year-old boy with billions of dollars to waste on the silly flights of fancy.
You might want to get some help, MightyMartian. You're projecting your suicidal thoughts and inadequacies on others.
Translation: Space travel is hard, so we should not do it. Much easier to sit and do nothing but consume like a good little cog in the economy.
I for one am glad that we have MightyMartians in this world. If we were all macsimcons we'd still be living in trees.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Insightful)
The goal was "privately funded spaceflight" so that eventually, everyone could go into space instead of just fighter pilots.
And I do take offense to your statement... The men that died building the empire state building were in fact heroes. I'm sure their loved ones would take issue with your opinion. They were dedicated steel workers that risked everything because they had pride in their work and knew they could get it done. They built one of the greatest buildings ever designed, it's still stands today because of their unquestionable skill. They knew exactly what the risks were when they started that Job. Even today construction workers risk their lives to build masterpieces. Any of them could easilly get a job building ranch style houses in the Midwest for about the same pay, yet they chose no to.
Those of us sitting in chairs with our lumbar support and wrist protecting keyboard trays have no business declaring anything about the goals and risk of men that do real work for a living.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:4, Interesting)
They built one of the greatest buildings ever designed, it's still stands today because of their unquestionable skill. They knew exactly what the risks were when they started that Job. Even today construction workers risk their lives to build masterpieces. Any of them could easily get a job building ranch style houses in the Midwest for about the same pay, yet they chose no to.
Wow. That's some real hero worship.
My grandfather worked on one of those megaprojects. It wasn't really some noble pursuit. That was his trade and it was where the work was.
They certainly took pride in it of course, as they are, after all a big, highly visible, project. But nothing so grand as you make out.
People were injured, and died. It was certainly dangerous work. But he certainly didn't think it was especially "heroic" work.
Those of us sitting in chairs with our lumbar support and wrist protecting keyboard trays have no business declaring anything about the goals and risk of men that do real work for a living.
Right because, as even the 20th century steelworkers knew, a real hero works the tuna boats, where each season its not a question of whether someone would die, it was just a question of whom.
Those steelworkers with their safety lines attached to rigid structures on dry land, and for whom when the weather becomes just too wild can go back inside and have a coffee to wait it out instead of riding it out in small tub on an angry sea.
What does a steelworkers know of real work? /sarcasm
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Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Insightful)
No offense, but "the goal" was achieved decades ago.
Nonsense. The goal of low-cost sub-orbital manned flights with completely reusable spacecraft has not been achieved. The fact that sub-orbital space flight was achieved decades ago, at massive expense and with single-use craft (or craft that have to be overhauled after every flight), isn't relevant. Achieving regular manned commercial space travel is also worthwhile, and also unachieved. What Virgin Galactic is trying to do is new, and worthwhile, in several ways. And even if all of the above had been done, that still wouldn't make it useless to design and test new spacecraft designs... and that's still an inherently dangerous process. Test pilots still die from time to time in aircraft, and we've been doing that for a half century longer yet.
I realize that you just wanted a chance to poke at your favorite strawman, but that just increases the ridiculousness of your statement.
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The guys (and woman) who died in Challenger were heroes. The casualties from this crash were like the people who died building the Empire State Building.
I'm not sure I agree, but I think there's a lot to say on both sides of this.
Here's what gets me though: while this was the 4th powered test flight, it was the first with a different fuel.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:4, Insightful)
Nah, I think the goal can be a bit broader than just that.
The larger goal is getting people and cargo to and from space cheaply, reliably, and downright commonplace. Getting the private sector involved is almost certainly a key to making that happen.
In the short term it might have a lot to do with low-orbit tourism and profits and losses, but that's ok. That's part of what it takes to get the money spent, that's part of what will lead to making it economically feasible, it's what will (hopefully) lead to greater interest by the public, and a lot of the technology and discoveries that make it all work well will move things forward towards the big picture goal.
Taking the reference to the Empire State Building: you can look at the construction of that building purely in terms of the economics and the time period or whatever. But regardless of whatever motives caused it to be built, it pushed the envelope of large scale construction and now, nearly a century later, a new building of that size is hardly noteworthy because now there are structures over twice as tall. Similarly, I hope companies like Virgin Galactic do the same thing for the space travel industry, regardless of what their publicly stated goals are.
Also, I'm betting that many (most?) of the people involved aren't putting their lives on the line just because of a paycheck, but because they really want to advance the space travel industry.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Insightful)
By the way, asshole, the only way to achieve real cheap space flight is to have commercial space flight, and just like anything that is done before it becomes the thing that everybody can afford, the first years of it are going to be expensive and only affordable by the wealthiest individuals. Just like cars used to be.
Some things will only be cheap when energy is absurdly cheap, due to the amount of energy that is required. Supersonic flight, space flight, running large wind tunnels, heated pools...those kinds of things.
Cars went almost directly from proofs-of-concept puttering around to mass affordability in less than two decades. Although the one-off concepts had been driving around for roughly a century before the first production vehicles were made.
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If we decide to all sit around and wait for cheap plentiful energy... we will never have it.
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Considering that SpaceX is not public (and will not go public until they have demonstrated Earth-to-Mars capability, according to Musk), SpaceX is vastly less shareholder-motivated than a company like Boeing or L-M. They also don't operate on cost-plus government contracts, which means its up to their own engineers to make a profit on the budget they have. If they do well, that's a big profit; if they do poorly they'll go broke. No "this is costing too much and taking too long, we'll need another billion do
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More importantly, the people who actually undertake the risk believe it's worth it.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:4, Insightful)
That's right. They know the risks, they know what has happened to people before, and what could happen to test pilots in the future.
The benefit is that they get to do things no one else has ever done before and sometimes they even get a lot of credit for it while they live. Sometimes they don't get credit, and sometimes they end up dead.
If only we all could meet our inevitable end in the pursuit of something worthwhile.
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This sounds callous, but progress is not without required risk. I hope Virgin Galactic continues the good work of private spaceflight that will be essential to continued advances in space exploration.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Insightful)
This sounds callous, but progress is not without required risk. I hope Virgin Galactic continues the good work of private spaceflight that will be essential to continued advances in space exploration.
Not callous at all. But it sure as hell refutes the attacks on NASA that were saying "the private sector will do space flight cheaper and safer". Meh. This stuff is inherently dangerous, and isn't yet routine, so stuff will go wrong.
Condolences and thanks to the family and friends of the crew. Your loss was in the interest of enriching us all.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:5, Interesting)
But it sure as hell refutes the attacks on NASA that were saying "the private sector will do space flight cheaper and safer".
NASA made space flight looked so routine with the space shuttle program (i.e., boring) that people stopped paying attention. When space flight becomes dangerous (i.e., Challenger and Columbia disasters), people pay more attention. For a while. After the problems are fixed, and space flight becomes routine again, no cares about it.
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In what sense, exactly, is killing the crew one time in sixty 'extremely safe'?
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Yes, we should listen to the people who think 'man-rated' means killing the crew one time in sixty is OK.
Re:Not a good week... (Score:4, Informative)
Can you produce a single, real, living person who believes your straw man?
Absolutely. There's this asshole:
http://slashdot.org/~AchilleTa... [slashdot.org]
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Unfortunately, this sort of thing can't really be classed as space exploration :\
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Why is private spaceflight "good work"? I mean, it's good if you're a shareholder and you stand to profit, but where is the moral good in that?
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Orbital Sciences launch was being paid for by NASA - how is that privately funded? Otherwise, ULA is a privately funded spaceflight company too.
Using NASA's dictionary (Score:2, Insightful)
Who knew?
Kidding aside it's a sad day for the family of the person killed.
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Who knew?
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Remember in the Challenger explosion, when the guy kept reading off telemetry after the explosion? I seem to remember him finally looking up and saying something like "There appears to be a malfunction."
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http://spaceflightnow.com/chal... [spaceflightnow.com]
T+1:56 "Flight controllers here are looking very carefully at the situation. Obviously a major malfunction."
T+2:50 "We have a report from the flight dynamics officer that the vehicle has exploded. The flight director confirms that. We are looking at checking with the recovery forces to see what can be done at this point."
(The main explosion happened at T+1:13.)
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May we mourn the loss of this brave pioneer and honor his or her legacy. I think this is a perfectly appropriate time to quote these words:
I know it is hard to understand, but sometimes painful things like this happen. It's all part of the process of exploration and discovery. It's all part of taking a chance and expanding man's horizons. The future doesn't belong to the fainthearted; it belongs to the brave. The [SpaceShipTwo] crew was pulling us into the future, and we'll continue to follow them...
The crew of the [SpaceShipTwo] honored us by the manner in which they lived their lives. We will never forget them, nor the last time we saw them, this morning, as they prepared for the journey and waved goodbye and "slipped the surly bonds of earth" to "touch the face of God."
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They're not mutually exclusive.
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what if this happens because Branson wants some results to show to investors and pushed too much? Would you still say he was a brave pioneer or just an abused employee?
In that case I'd say he was both. He was made a pioneer by his intentions. He wouldn't be the first pioneer to be abused and mistreated, just as he is not the first pioneer to give his life trying to get humanity to the next frontier.
Re:Using NASA's dictionary (Score:5, Insightful)
Engineering and operating equipment at this level requires a certain level of being fairly clinical and detached about it, and not devolving into a screeching monkey while it's happening.
So "anomaly" being "outside of expected parameters", sure.
I'm pretty sure that doesn't mean that inwardly you're not going "oh, crap, no" .. but like first responders and medical people, while it's happening you need to keep it reined in.
I wish I could dredge up some examples, but I seem to remember seeing some things which some of the astronauts said in the middle of a crisis which made them sound like it was just a little thing, when the rest of us would all be screaming "we're all gonna die we're all gonna die".
I seem to recall one of them went through an explosion or a crash or something, and then joked about it being a bit of a rough ride or something. Even the other astronauts were all stunned by it, I just can't recall the specifics of it. Apparently he was back at his office the same day, and flying the next as if nothing happened.
Big Brass Ones are kind of required at this level.
Re:Using NASA's dictionary (Score:4, Informative)
"Houston, we have a problem" when an oxygen tank has just exploded and practically ripped the service module in half. Yup, that seems like a good start.
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The incident you are thinking of is, I think, when Neil Armstrong crashed in the Lunar Module Simulator.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/... [huffingtonpost.com]
Apparently the story goes that he was back in his office eating lunch a few hours later like nothing happened.
Re:Using NASA's dictionary (Score:4, Funny)
That sounds plausible. Or Gemini 8. Or any number of things. He was a test pilot on some pretty extraordinary things, and pretty famous for being cool under pressure.
Neil Armstrong was someone who is entitled to a place of honor in the Big Brass Ones Club.
Chuck Norris would think twice about messing with Neil Armstrong. ;-)
Huge setback (Score:4, Insightful)
As in the kind of setback that could put them out of business entirely. This isn't a cargo ship.
Re:Huge setback (Score:5, Insightful)
Virgin is a wealthy company backed by a very wealthy man.
This is a setback, but crashes happen.
If everyone had given up on airplanes in the early days because of a few deaths, then we'd all be taking the train today.
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We gave up on zeppelins because of a few deaths. :)
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We gave up on zeppelins because heavier-than-air craft became much more capable and cheaper to operate. They still crashed and burned on a regular basis.
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yeah but there are still blimps
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And, yet, we still have airships which hang around sporting events.
So, no, we didn't completely give up on them. We just decided it wasn't good to be filling them with flammable gas, and painting it with flammable aluminum paint (or whatever it was).
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Right, you've gotta break some eggs if you want to see the big return on investment.
A few lives here and there aren't going to stop the quest for profits.
Re:Huge setback (Score:4, Insightful)
In fairness, I would say the guys who are flying these things know damned well what the risk is, and would fight tooth and nail for the opportunity to do it.
And I seriously doubt Branson would view any of these people as expendable assets.
Because I suspect he wants to fly on this as much as anybody else does.
It's sad, it sucks ... but nobody is just looking at this as a cost of doing business. A very real possibility, yes. But I very much doubt anybody treats it as anything except a really terrible loss.
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They're backed by Richard Branson. No way is he giving up that much potential money that easily.
Re:Huge setback (Score:5, Funny)
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Hey, it's the anti-Space Nutter Nutter.
That's a shame (Score:3)
I've been following this project since I saw that great documentary "Black Sky" on SpaceshipOne. It really does look like the first truly reliable commercial means for someone to go into "space" without being an astronaut/cosmonaut or being insanely wealthy. Of course, at $200,000, it isn't within reach of most of us--but it's a helluva lot better than the $20 million that some have spent in the past.
Re:That's a shame (Score:5, Insightful)
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The reason people say Yuri Gagarin when you ask who the first human in space was is because Yuri beat Shepard by almost a month (April 12th 1961 vs May 5th 1961).
I've never, ever, heard anyone suggest Shepard didn't deserve Astronaut wings or the title "first American in space" because it was suborbital.
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Well, not TODAY, obviously.
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Obviously.
Sad, regrettable and probably inevitable. (Score:4, Interesting)
I think I may have posted years ago this was sadly inevitable and a bad investment for states subsidizing “space ports”. We may put up with the occasional loss of life in pursuit of loftier goals, but suffer any deaths in pursuit of “space tourism” and it would probably be the death knell for the industry.
Have any of these “space ports” entered the construction phase? Surely backers will see this as good money after bad now. This coming so shortly after the Antares rocket explosion can only seem to amplify the perceived risk of attempting flights into space.
I’m all for progress, but how about we wait until access to space for industry and government is routine before we think about tourism?
Re:Sad, regrettable and probably inevitable. (Score:5, Insightful)
People die every year climbing Everest, and yet every year, people climb Everest.
True... but... (Score:3)
True, but rightly or wrongly those people are perceived of has being in control of their own fate and could have escaped death with better decisions. Here you just strap your butt to someone else’s bomb.
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The key difference is that Everest was already there before we arrived. Mount Everest could never be built by charging people a fee to climb it. It would not be economical.
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Everest death rate per summit is a mere 1.5% in the period 2000-2012. But sure, let's fear monger--this is Slashdot after all!
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Spaceport America (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spaceport_America) is one of these "space ports" in my area. While I don't think this was a good investment for the local governments, it is operational and launching rockets. Virgin Galactic is the main company but there are several others. This includes SpaceX who is doing testing here (Their main spaceport will be in Texas).
and the irst powered flight since tinkering fuel (Score:2)
which is the most forward instrument in the space opera, "ours all go boom."
Is this the first death in commercial space exp? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Is this the first death in commercial space exp (Score:5, Informative)
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This is space tourism.
And yes, this might well be considered the first death in commercial space tourism.
Just curious (Score:2)
Does Spaceshiptwo have ejection seats or do the pilots have to manually open a hatch and jump out?
Thank an adventurer sometime (Score:5, Insightful)
Spaceflight is dangerous. I think the best quote ever was by Mary Shafer of NASA who said "Insisting on perfect safety is for people who don't have the balls to live in the real world." These people clearly don't suffer that problem. [spacequotations.com]
I thank the explorers who take these risks, sometimes at the cost of their lives. Without them the world would be a much smaller and worse place. It's hard to even imagine the courage it must take to cross an ocean to an unknown continent or to fly into space. People who do these things have my everlasting respect.
Re:Thank an adventurer sometime (Score:4, Insightful)
Are you out of your friggin mind? No disrespect to them, but these guys weren't explorers. They were testing a commercial craft, no different conceptually from the guys Boeing hires to give an aircraft fresh off the assembly line a quick spin around the sky. They should be mourned, but for what they were - brave individuals doing a difficult job, not for something they weren't.
Per aspera ad astra (Score:4, Informative)
Per aspera ad astra ("A rough road leads to the stars")
Brutally sad day (Score:5, Interesting)
Burt Rutan, the designer of the Spaceship One and Two, has been a hero, perhaps the hero, of my life. A passionate, innovative aircraft designer; unbelievably aggressive in trying new things, pushing boundaries that nobody even knew existed.
His first plane design, the VariViggen [wikipedia.org] was an astonishingly different design than anything out there before; designed while a student at Cal Poly and built in his garage. And it flew beautifully. I saw that plane, his later VariEze and LongEz flying in formation at the Oshkosh Fly-in in 1980.
He set up a shop at the Mojave Airport, called Rutan Aircraft Factory (RAF). In the middle of nowhere, nothing there but space to build new planes, and he built many. Each one more exotic than the last. His Boomerang [wikipedia.org], his last personal plane, is so far from the standard boring airplane designs that most people wouldn't believe it could fly; but it does fly, efficiently, safely, and every apparently crazy design idea has absolutely solid engineering and aerodynamic backing.
I took my 14-year-old daughter to see the first flight into space of Spaceship One in 2004. Burt's long-time co-worker and chief test pilot, Mike Melville, flew it that day. As it was climbing to space, it started to spin, pretty fast (about 60 rpm.) Melville said that he was scared for a second, but then decided to wait until he was "in the safety of space" to arrest the spin. A test pilot, flying an experimental winged spaceship, who has never flown to space before, in a plane spinning at Mach 3, decides in a second to wait until he was in the safety of space. And of course, it worked out; he was able to use the reaction control system to arrest the spin; took out some candy to float around the cockpit, took some photos out the windows, and enjoyed the five minutes of weightlessness. Just one of a thousand, maybe ten thousand adventures in Burt's long career.
I've wondered my whole life about how Burt responds when people die flying planes of his design. In 1983, while at Oshkosh, a VariEze crashed approaching the airport (it looks as if the linkage between the control stick and the elevator failed.) Burt, up on stage, described his trip out to the crash site. As professional as he could be, but I felt it must have been tearing him up inside. He gave the gift of flight to thousands of enthusiasts, but those great planes took the lives of some of those people. How do you reconcile that? I'm not sure I could have, or can today.
Burt got out of the homebuilt airplane business after being sued too many times by the survivors of crashes. In the last suit, the guy built the plane incredibly wrong, instead of using the 10 layers of fiberglass to attack the fins to the wing, he just glued them on. Astonishingly, it held up for years, but finally broke during a low-high-speed pass. Burt won all the lawsuits, but it was clear that he would spend years defending himself instead of doing what he loved, so he closed the shop.
Burt retired a few years ago, and lives up in Idaho instead of Mojave. Sadly, for all the innovation he created over the years, there were no commercial successes. This looked like it might be the one, but it's never going to happen.
This is not the first death in the program; sadly. While testing a previous engine about 5 years ago, the nitrous oxide detonated, killing three of his engineers. I mourned for them, and for the pilot today. My joy over my whole adult life in seeing the achievements of Rutan and his team are about evenly matched by the heartache I feel for them today. They haven't announced the name of the pilot who died today, but may he rest in peace.
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This is hardly one of the "first tests" of SpaceShipTwo. I believe they were getting pretty close to the point where they were going to start the first passenger flights.
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fourth powered test is pretty close to being the first
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If that were true, then the Space Shuttle would have used them instead of solid rocket boosters [wikipedia.org].
Uh, it is true. The SRBs weren't chosen for their specific impulse, they were chosen primarily because they were cheap to develop compared to a new liquid rocket booster which would probably have required a new engine, too.