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NASA Begins Outsourcing ISS Supply Missions to Private Companies
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NASA Begins Outsourcing ISS Supply Missions to Private Companies |
12/24/08
Arguably, commercializing space flight will lead to the same innovation that occurred with airplanes, but not without catastrophe. The Space Shuttle is the most complex machine ever built, and private companies may not fully understand the complexity of the challenge, or the amount of resources it takes to get the job done. NASA and Congress have underestimated the necessary resources in the past as well, so it's inevitable the these first generation space companies with dramatically lower budgets are going to encounter the same kind of problems.
With 10% failure rate for space shuttles, the question isn't whether first generation private space ships - seemingly routine, actually experimental - will crash and burn, but what happens when they do.
12/24/08
12/24/08
The whole private vs. government arguments made above are not really true. ULA (formerly Lockheed Martin and Boeing / Titan IV/Atlas II/Atlas V vs. Delta II/IV are 'private' in the same way that Orbital Sciences Corporation and SpaceX are. NASA currently uses OSC, and ULA for launching it's payloads as it has for some time (expendible launch vehicles).
NASA has always relied on the private sector to develop technology dating all the way back to the beginning of the space program.
That said, SpaceX worries me with their arrogance (ahem Tesla Motors as an Elon example) in how 'simple' it is to get to space and how 'dumb' ULA and Orbital Sciences are. There are just some laws of the universe that spaceX will realize it cannot circumvent and still have a reliable launch vehicle (like an Atlas V).
Best of luck.
12/24/08
Indeed, it is written into NASA's charter that they must use privatized companies for anything that they don't need to do themselves. Granted, this is still an unusual situation in that all the previous private launches haven't had human lives depending on their success. Just, you know, TV signals and Howard Stern's meager hopes for retaining a career.
12/24/08
I didn't hear that either company had gone beyond LEO, so I'm curious if there's a projected 1st launch date for either side.
In any case, this will very possibly be looked at as the tipping point for a commercial presence in space. When you start having billions on the values of contracts, things are going to get done.
12/24/08
SpaceX did send a few all the way to the other side, if that helps.
12/24/08
12/24/08
12/24/08
Hey, it's ambitious to the point of not being feasible with today's engineering materials, but there's nothing out there to suggest it's impossible.
12/24/08