Category Archives: Space Policy

Space policy roundup – Aug.8.13

Some space policy items from today:

Update:

Space policy roundup – Aug.7.13

Some space policy related items:

 

Space policy roundup – Aug.5.13

Some space policy related items found today:

20th Anniversary of the first DC-X Flight – special event in New Mexico

You may have noticed the new ad here for the DC-X 20 year anniversary symposium, August 16-18, in New Mexico –

DC-X Anniversary Event

The DC-X (Delta Clipper eXperimental) project was a seminal event in the development of the NewSpace approach to space development. Using a 1950’s X-project organizational style, it accomplished all its goals (e.g. repeated vertical takeoffs and landings, rapid turnaround between flights, lightweight hydrogen tank, flight operation with a very small team, etc.) at 1/10th cost that would have been spent if carried out in the standard NASA/USAF procurement manner. The project aimed to be the start of a systematic step-by-step development program leading to a fully reusable orbital launch vehicle. Unfortunately, while DC-X/XA successfully made the first step, the project got derailed with the over-complicated, over-ambitious X-33. Find lots of resources about the project in the DC-X History section.

Henry Vanderbilt gives his endorsement of the anniversary event here:

We’re coming up fast on the 20th anniversary of DC-X’s first flight later this month, and some of the people involved have organized a conference in New Mexico to mark the occasion.  I’ve volunteered to help out with the conference, and that’s what I’m writing to you about today.

Much of the original DC-X team will be there, to be honored and to talk about how they did it, techniques used and lessons learned.  There will also be a look at some of the many things that came of DC-X’s success, plus a Reusable Spaceplane X-Vehicles workshop looking to what should come next, as well as a tour of the New Mexico Spaceport.

This is a one-of-a-kind event.  It’s very unlikely that all these people will ever be in one place at the same time again.  If you have a deep interest in where “new space” came from, where it is now, and where it should go next, this event is more than worth a trip to New Mexico in August.

Conference agenda and details at http://dc-xspacequest.org/

thanks for your time

Henry Vanderbilt
founder
Space Access Society

Space on The John Batchelor Show: Bob Zimmerman + Hotel Mars

Bob Zimmerman talked about space during two episodes of the  John Batchelor radio program this week.

Wed 7/31/13 Hr 3 Batchelor 

  • On Friday, an astronaut on ISS controlled and steered a rover on Earth.  While zipping around Earth several hundred miles above the planet’s surface, the European Space Agency astronaut Luca Parmitano drove a 220-pound (100 kilograms) rover across a moon-mimicking landscape here at NASA’s Ames Research Center, even ordering the robot to deploy a simulated film-based radio telescope antenna.
  • A supernova has exploded in the galaxy M74, only 30 million light years away.  This is one of the closest supernovae in recent years. Though it’s still brightening and has reached 12th magnitude, it’s not expected to brighten to naked-eye visibility (about 6th magnitude). Astronomers however have spotted the progenitor star in archival Hubble images, which they have identified as a M-type red supergiant that was also particularly bright in the infrared.

Thurs 8/1/13 Hr 3 Batchelor :

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This week’s Hotel Mars segment on the John Batchelor show included Dr. Richard Obousy who talked about the  Icarus Interstellar project, faster-than-light travel, and breakthrough propulsion :  John Batchelor Hotel Mars, Wednesday, 7-31-13- Thespaceshow’s Blog