[also aboard was the ashes of Gary Bourgois of Skybirdradio and Friday 
Night Live fame, part of the Space Services Inc. Celestis Memorial 
Spaceflights service 
http://www.celestis.com/memorial/explorers/bourgois.asp ]

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/03/science/space/03launch-2.html?ref=us

Launch of Private Rocket Fails; Three Satellites Were Onboard
By JOHN SCHWARTZ

A privately funded rocket was lost on its way to space Saturday night, 
bringing a third failure in a row to an Internet multimillionaire’s 
effort to create a market for low-cost space-delivery business.

The failure occurred a little more than two minutes after launch, about 
the time of first stage separation, and the vehicle appeared to be 
oscillating before the signal was lost.

“We are hearing from the launch control center that there has been an 
anomaly on that vehicle,” said Max Vozoff, a launch commentator for the 
company, on a Webcast of the event soon after the live video feed from 
the rocket went dead.

The two-stage Falcon 1 rocket was manufactured by Space Exploration 
Technologies Corporation, based in Hawthorne, Calif.

Elon Musk, an Internet entrepreneur, founded the company, known as 
SpaceX, in 2002 after selling his online payment company, PayPal, to 
eBay for $1.5 billion. The company, which has been hailed as one of the 
most promising examples of an entrepreneurial “new space” movement, now 
has 525 employees.

The rocket was launched from the Kwajalein Atoll in the central Pacific 
shortly after 11:30 p.m. Eastern time, after several hours of delays and 
one aborted launch attempt.

The first Falcon 1 launch, in March 2006, failed about a minute into its 
ascent because of a fuel line leak. A second rocket, launched in March 
2007, made it to space but was lost about five minutes after launching 
because it began rolling uncontrollably.

On this flight, the Falcon carried three small satellites for the 
Department of Defense and NASA.

The company is also developing a larger rocket, the Falcon 9, with nine 
engines in the first stage. That vehicle is intended to provide cargo 
services to the International Space Station under a contract for NASA 
after the shuttle program winds down in 2010.

SpaceX performed a successful test firing of that rocket at its 
facilities in McGregor, Tex., last week. The company has further Falcon 
1 launches in the works.

Charles Lurio, an independent space consultant, said that it should not 
be surprising to lose single-use rocket vehicles in the early stages of 
development, because their design does not allow test flights.

“It’s all or nothing once it leaves the pad,” he said. “But I hope 
SpaceX keeps trying. They’re very competent people.”

-- 

Dishnut-P

====================================================================
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      **In Loving Memory of Mom (Dishnut Gerry)**



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