http://www.space.com/missionlaunches/SS1_guide_040618.html


The public is invited to watch history made Monday when a company
called Scaled Composites attempts to launch the first piloted
commercial vehicle into space.

Event planners expect a cosmic Woodstock. Motels in the area are
mostly booked and plans are in place for an all-night party. The
flight of SpaceShipOne from an airport-turned-spaceport in
California's Mojave Desert is scheduled to begin shortly after 9:30
a.m. ET (6:30 local time).

MSNBC.com plans to offer a live webcast. Event officials said CNN will
broadcast the launch on television, but CNN programming officials did
not reply to a request to confirm that.

Radio station KLOA 104.9 plans a live audio webcast of the flight that
will begin with traffic and weather reports at 8 a.m. ET (5 a.m. local
time). Radio-only broadcasts are planned by local stations KGET 970
and KGOV.

SPACE.com will have reporters at the scene providing updates over the
weekend and during the flight.

Flight plan

Scaled Composite officials expect a smooth flight, but anyone who
follows the space industry knows that every flight has inherent risks.

In fact SpaceShipOne had a landing mishap during a test flight in
September. There were no injuries and the craft was not significantly
damaged when it slid off the runway.

Weather permitting, the craft will be carried aloft aboard the White
Knight, a somewhat conventional airplane built specially for this
purpose. An hour after taking off from the Mojave Airport, at about
50,000 feet, the White Knight will release SpaceShipOne, whose pilot
will fire a rocket, powered by rubber and laughing gas, for about 80
seconds.

SpaceShipOne should soar to 62 miles (100 kilometers), crossing the
threshold of space on a suborbital trajectory. The pilot, who has not
yet been named, would officially become an astronaut.

[Later announced to be Mike Melvill ]



According to plan, the craft will spend about three minutes in
weightlessness, then glide back to Earth. It will land about 1 hour
and 25 minutes after the initial takeoff in the same location.

The launch is planned for early morning because winds tend to pick up
later in the day. Weather could scrub the launch, possibly pushing it
back a day or more.

Viewing tips

A public viewing area will include loudspeakers to announce aspect of
the flight that can't be seen from the ground. Much of event will be
visible to the naked eye, but binoculars are recommended.

Event planners say traffic congestion could be heavy in the predawn
hours before launch. There are a handful of motels in the town of
Mojave, which is about 75 miles north of Los Angeles. Camping will be
permitted at the Mojave Airport for Saturday and Sunday nights. The
airport is closed to incoming air traffic.

SpaceShipOne was built by Burt Rutan, considered an engineering master
in the industry.

"Without the entrepreneur approach, space access would continue to be
out of reach for ordinary citizens," Rutan said. "The SpaceShipOne
flights will change all that and encourage others to usher in a new,
low-cost era in space travel."

With the support of wealthy investor Paul Allen, Rutan's company,
Scaled Composites, is seeking also to win the $10 million Ansari X
Prize. The winner must use a privately built vehicle to transport
three people 62 miles (100 kilometers) above Earth twice within two
weeks.

Monday's planned flight is one in a series of tests to prepare Scaled
Composites for a run at the prize. A May 13 test flight took
SpaceShipOne to 40 miles (64.4 kilometers).

More than 20 teams have registered to compete for the purse, and some
besides Rutan's group are running test flights. Analysts say the money
might be claimed by the end of this summer. The cash offer expires
Jan. 1, 2005.

Filling up

A list of services in the Mojave area, along with other details of the
event, are available at Scaled Composite's web site. Expect a
difficult search for a place to stay, however.

Calls Thursday morning to 11 motels in the town of Mojave found only
one, the Friendship Inn, had a room available Sunday night. Some
motels were also booked solid in Rosamond, 15 miles away and in
Tehachapi, 20 miles from Mojave. Others said they expect to have rooms
but are not taking reservations.

A few rooms were available 30 miles away in Lancaster, but the
reservation attendant at one motel there said dozens of room requests
had been made in recent days because the town of Mojave was filling
up.



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Countdown Maru

rob


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