Category Archives: Space

SpaceX Dragon reaches orbit atop a Falcon with a fiery tail

arstechnica.com | Matt Ford | Dec 9, 2010

Until recently, there have been two classes of people playing with rockets: those of us who enjoy playing with small (and not so small) toy models in our backyards and open fields, and the governments, who get the big boy toys to do some serious rocketry. Recently, private companies have been getting into the act and showing what can be done.

A few years ago, Scaled Composites’ SpaceShipOne completed the unprecedented act of putting a human into space (the edge of space, mind you) and returning him safely to Earth. Yesterday, the Space Exploration Technologies corporation one-upped them by becoming the first nongovernmental entity to put a vehicle into low Earth orbit.

SpaceX’s Dragon spacecraft has been designed to carry a crew of up to seven (or cargo) into a low Earth orbit, and return them to Earth safely. It has been developed as part of NASA’s Commercial Orbital Transportation Services program and is ultimately designed to pick up where the Space Shuttle will leave off, ferrying people and cargo to and from the ISS.

Read more…

Company is first to return spacecraft from orbit

AP | Marcia Dunn | Dec 9, 2010

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. – (AP) — NASA took a giant leap away from the spaceflight business Wednesday as a private company launched a spacecraft into orbit and for the first time guided it safely back to Earth, a feat previously achieved only by large national governments.

The capsule built by Space Exploration Technologies Inc. splashed down into the Pacific Ocean, right on target, following a three-hour mission that should pave the way for an actual flight to the International Space Station next summer.

NASA wants to enlist private companies to handle space station supply runs as well as astronaut rides after the shuttles stop flying next year. Until then, the space agency will have to continue paying tens of millions of dollars to the Russians for every American astronaut ferried back and forth.

Prior to Wednesday’s test flight, recovering a spacecraft re-entering from orbit was something achieved by only five independent nations: the United States, Russia, China, Japan and India, plus the European Space Agency, a consortium of countries.

NASA immediately offered up congratulations, as did astronauts, lawmakers, and aerospace organizations and companies.

Read more…

Discovery space shuttle travels to the launch pad for the last time

John Davidson | 09/21/2010 | TNM

Traveling atop a gigantic, Apollo-era crawler transporter, the space shuttle Discovery embarked on its six-hours-long journey, its last one, from the capacious Vehicle Assembly Building to the seaside Launch Pad 39A at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center.

The shuttle is scheduled to take off on its final mission to the International Space Station (ISS) on November 1. The mission will pertain to the delivery of a storage room to the ISS, as well as a humanoid robot aide for the astronaut crew at the outpost.

On its way to the pad, the shuttle was cheered by hundreds of shuttle workers and their families, invited by NASA to view Discovery’s rollout from a viewing area close to the river rock-lined pad trek. Discovery’s 3 1/2-mile long journey to the pad marked a bittersweet experience for the US space agency, which has only two shuttle missions to go after the Discovery.

Read more…