Category Archives: Space industry

Loretta Jackson Delong, co-founder of XCOR, passes away

The NewSpace community suffers a big loss:

From Rand’s posting:

Aleta, as she was known to all, passed away this morning [Dec. 4, 2016] in the Midland hospital ER. Aleta knew from the time she was twelve that she would build and fly spaceships. Her first professional work was as an engineering co op from Indiana Tech working on the Gemini program for McDonnell. Her engineering degree was cut short when she went home to nurse her mother back to health. After that, she joined the USAF as airman Jackson.

Aleta worked for Xerox for ten years as a repair technician and wrote both science fiction and non-fiction stories. She worked for the L-5 Society, both in Tucson and later in Washington DC. During her stay in DC, Aleta became an aide to General Daniel Graham and helped create the DC-X launch vehicle, later renamed the Clipper Graham. She also edited the Journal of Practical Applications of Space while with Graham’s Strategic Defense Initiative Organization.

As an indefatigable supporter of launch vehicle development, Aleta then became one of Rotary Rocket Company’s first employees, where she was general office manager. When the propulsion group was laid off from Rotary, Aleta was the person who told Jeff Greason, Dan DeLong, and Doug Jones that they had to stick with it, and founded XCOR Aerospace.

In the beginning, because the XCOR founders received no pay, Aleta took an additional job as a reporter/editor of the Mojave Desert News. Meanwhile, she was XCOR’s purchasing, personnel, bookkeeping, editorial, receiving, community outreach, and travel departments. As the company grew, she shed most of these tasks. In late 2015 she helped Jeff Greason start Agile Aero. Aleta was a personal as well as professional partner of Dan DeLong since the early days of Rotary, and they were officially married in 2016. The very next day, however, she was diagnosed with ovarian cancer, and succumbed to complications of the chemotherapy regimen.

See the many tributes in the comments there as well.

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Aleta’s husband Dan Delong added this:

Thanks all for the kind words. In order to allow time for those traveling, and to get around the holidays, the memorial service will be Sunday, Jan 15 at the Christian Church of Midland at 2608 Neely Ave. Thanks again, Dan.

Videos: Jeff Bezos talks about Blue Origin, a 10000 year clock, & Saturn engine recovery

Jeff Bezos, founder and CEO of Amazon.com, recently  received an award at the Museum of Flight near Seattle and he was interviewed on stage. He talked about plans for Amazon and about his various outside projects including the Blue Origin space development company: Jeff Bezos explains Blue Origin’s space symbology – Alan Boyle/Geekwire  –

In this segment of the interview, he talked about the 10,000 year clock project: Jeff Bezos shares big ideas, from drones to 10,000-year clock – Alan Boyle/Geekwire –

In this video, he talks

about the mission to recover the F-1 rocket engines from the Apollo 11 moon landing flight. His team was able to retrieve the engines from 14,000 ft under the sea.

Find more about Bezos’s many projects at www.bezosexpeditions.com.

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Videos: SpaceX Falcon 9 booster returns for landing at sea + Bigelow module on ISS expand to full size

A couple of major milestones in NewSpace last week.

On Friday, SpaceX launched the THAICOM-8 communications satellite with a Falcon 9 rocket. After separating from the second stage, the first stage booster of the Falcon returned to earth for a successful landing on the platform of a special ship that maintains a fixed position autonomously. This is the third successful booster landing at sea. (There was also a successful booster return for a landing on the ground at Cape Canaveral last December.)

Here is a sped-up video from a camera attached to the first stage:

This video shows the launch of the Falcon rocket:

And on Saturday, Bigelow Aerospace‘s Bigelow Expandable Activity Module (BEAM), which was delivered to the Int. Space Station in April via a SpaceX Dragon spacecraft, was successfully expanded to its full volume:

Video: Washington Post panel discusses milestones in commercial space travel

The Washington Post recently hosted a panel discussion on ” how recent milestones in commercial space travel are opening up new frontiers for business and exploration”: Virgin Galactic CEO: The space boom will happen when middle-class Americans can afford to travel there – The Washington Post

Videos: SpaceX lands booster after launch of communications satellite to GEO

SpaceX launched a Japanese TV satellite from Cape Canaveral to geostationary orbit last night and also landed the first stage on a floating sea platform. This was a more difficult feat than its previous landing. The GEO orbit trajectory required a more energetic launch that meant the first stage was going faster and higher when it separated from the upper stage and had less fuel margin as well for slowing down. It was all done in the dark as well. But the booster stuck the landing right on the center of the X on the ship.

Here is a video for the SpaceX webcast from shortly before liftoff, through the landing, and to the shutdown of the upper stage when it reached orbit:

Here is a segment showing only the scenes from the landing:

And here is the complete webcast: