Suborbital spaceships spark scientific frenzy
Reusable rocket-propelled vessels will help advance scientific research

By Leonard David
Space.com

updated 1:16 p.m. CT, Fri., March. 12, 2010

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/35837994/ns/technology_and_science-space


Anticipation is on the rise for a new crop of commercial suborbital 
spaceships that can serve the scientific and educational market. These 
reusable rocket-propelled vessels are expected to offer quick, routine 
and affordable access to the edge of space, along with the capability to 
carry research and educational crew members.

There are a number of "cash and carry" suborbital craft under 
development by such groups as: Armadillo Aerospace, Blue Origin, Masten 
Space Systems, Virgin Galactic, as well as XCOR Aerospace.

Vehicle builders still face rigorous shake-out schedules, flight safety 
hurdles, as well as extensive trial-runs of their respective craft 
before suborbital space jaunts become commonplace.

But some 250 scientists, educators and the makers of suborbital rocket 
vehicles met last month in Boulder, Colorado to discuss the tantalizing 
science opportunities offered when suborbital trips are routine during 
the Next-Generation Suborbital Researchers Conference.

What's the attraction?
The attraction for investigators at the meeting was to gauge use of 
suborbital craft to carry out a variety of high-altitude science 
studies, including access to three to four minutes of microgravity for 
experimentation, discovery and testing.

Suborbital flights up to 62 miles (100 km) above Earth could serve 
numbers of disciplines, such as astronomy, the life sciences, 
microgravity physics, or to plumb a little-known atmospheric region 
dubbed "the ignorosphere."

Lori Garver, NASA's deputy administrator, said that the government is 
keen on stimulating the suborbital market, seeing it as bridge building 
to orbital flight.

To this end, Garver noted that the space agency is seeking Congressional 
approval in their fiscal year 2011 budget for $75 million in planned 
funding over five years for NASA's Commercial Reusable Suborbital 
Research (CRuSR) program.

"Suborbital puts us on a sustainable, step-by-step path to building an 
industry that evolves to low cost access to orbit," Garver said. "We're 
really on the cusp of an exciting new capability for our country and for 
our economy."

Charles Miller, senior advisor for commercial space and program 
executive for CRuSR at NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C. told 
SPACE.com: "Industry will pick the point design. Some of them will 
succeed, some of them will fail. Over time it's vastly superior at 
accelerating innovation in the nation."

Miller said the backing by NASA's CRuSR program is akin to the 
government becoming an anchor tenant customer for air mail delivery in 
the 1920s. That relationship, he said, helped the industry close their 
business case and raise private capital.

"We see the same thing happening in commercial suborbital research," 
Miller continued. "NASA is going to be an early customer," with other 
federal agencies, universities and the private industry becoming 
customers too, he suggested.

Flight rates: still to be proven
Yet to be demonstrated is the hoped-for flight rates of suborbital 
vehicles. Quick turnaround of these craft is central to realizing the 
profit-making potential of over-and-over sojourns by piloted and 
unpiloted vessels to the suborbital heights.

As pointed out in a handout from Masten Space Systems of Mojave, 
California: "Reusable Launch Vehicles – Just Gas 'Em Up and Go!" The 
company said it intends to begin precursor flights later this year, 
flying an unpiloted reusable craft up to 22 miles (36 km) in a beta 
testing program. The California-based company won $1 million last 
October in a NASA contest to build reusable rocket-powered craft 
designed to mimic lunar landers.

 From the scientific perspective, for the story to close for science, 
flight rates have to be high, said Alan Stern, chair of the scientific 
organizing committee for the conference and associate vice president of 
the Southwest Research Institute's Space Science and Engineering 
Division in Boulder.

Stern also chairs the Commercial Spaceflight Federation's Suborbital 
Applications Researchers Group and is a former NASA associate 
administrator for science. He called attention to the fact that 
passenger suborbital flights will be risky business.

"Risk is not new to scientists and educators," Stern added. "Scientists 
risk their lives going to the bottom of the ocean, to the tops of 
mountains, to the poles of the Earth. Scientists have lost their lives 
in space exploration, as have educators," he said, noting the tragic 
loss in 1986 of the Challenger shuttle crew that included Christa 
McAuliffe, America's selected Teacher in Space.

But safety is also key, advised George Nield, Associate Administrator 
for Commercial Space Transportation at the Federal Aviation Administration.

"As much as I wish it were, safety is not an absolute," Nield pointed 
out. "Misfortune will always be an uninvited possibility whenever a 
rocket launches."

Safety is a mindset...a professional tension, Nield counseled, and for 
all the people involved in providing a rocket trip, they must be 
constantly on alert. They have to be determined to "get it right this 
time, next time, all the time," he said.

Entrepreneurial approach
The initiative of roaring skyward to the edge of space on repeat voyages 
was spotlighted in a recent report – "Revitalizing NASA's Suborbital 
Program: Advancing Science, Driving Innovation, and Developing 
Workforce" – issued late last month by the prestigious National Research 
Council.

NASA's suborbital program conducts research using aircraft, balloons, 
and rockets. It enables cutting-edge research in areas such as climate 
science and astrophysics and is vital in developing technologies and 
training personnel, says the report issued late last month.

An NRC recommendation from a blue ribbon committee of experts observes: 
"NASA should continue to monitor commercial suborbital space 
developments. Whereas the commercial developers stated to the committee 
that they do not need NASA funding to meet their business objectives, 
this entrepreneurial approach offers the potential for a range of 
opportunities for low-cost quick-access to space that may benefit NASA 
as well as other federal agencies."

Pay attention to the ignorosphere
One scientific pursuit that seems a perfect match for suborbital 
vehicles is ultra-high upper atmospheric research, said Pete Worden, 
director of NASA's Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, California. That 
area is too high for balloons, too low for satellites and too expensive 
for repeat sounding rocket visits, he said.

Very little information exists on this upper atmosphere region, often 
called the "ignorosphere," Worden noted. Suborbital vehicles rocketing 
from various spaceports around the globe could sample this region, he said.

"There's beginning to be evidence that there is some very complicated 
coupling mechanisms, particularly in changes of solar ultraviolet flux 
on the upper atmosphere and climate changes on the ground. We don't know 
how that works," Worden said.

Add to the research mix that life may well exist in that region, Worden 
pointed out. "If you have life in these upper regions of Earth's 
atmosphere, that begins to tell us where we can look in other places," 
he said, such as life in the upper atmosphere of Venus or perhaps Mars.

"These are the kinds of things that add up to significant research 
that's clearly world-class," Worden concluded.

URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/35837994/ns/technology_and_science-space/

-- 
================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
Mail: antunes at uh dot edu

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