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USA NASA takes one giant leap into commerical space flight (karma: 2)
en>fr fr>en By TexanForever Comments: 21031, member since Thu Jun 10, 2004On Thu May 17, 2012 02:02 PM
... Ho-Hum, America's fifth decade of space flight. ... S'what's new? ... So commonplace and easy in the USA, looks like our government's getting out of space flight and turning it over to Mom-N'Pop commercial enterprises. ... How capitalist! ... By the Way, how's the great French Socialist Experiment coming along? ... Lots of private ventures in space, no doubt, with all that surplus Euro cash.
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NASA takes one giant leap into commerical space flight
Thursday - 5/17/2012, 10:16am ET, By Michael O'Connell
@moconnellWFED
After three delays, the first U.S. commercial space flight is set to launch this week. A capsule built by the company SpaceX will take off from Cape Canaveral and head to the International Space Station. If successful, it will be a milestone in NASA's plan to replace its space shuttle program with commercial carriers.
"We've been launching things into space for 50 years," said NASA's Deputy Administrator Lori Garver. "It's time we did trust our industry to be able to lead the way."
Garver spoke to The Federal Drive with Tom Temin and Emily Kopp Thursday about the upcoming launch.
Lori Garver, deputy administrator, NASA
Aside from weather concerns and any other day-of-the-launch issues, the Falcon 9 rocket is on track to blast off on Saturday, May 19, with a backup date of May 22. The rocket will carry the Dragon capsule into space, on a mission to deliver supplies of food and water to the International Space Station.
"It is something we do need since the retirement of the space shuttle," Garver said. "This has been our plan for replacing the space shuttle, which was so much larger and built the space station by carrying the modules."
The Falcon 9 mission is a smaller, much more focused effort that allows NASA to reduce the cost of space transportation by using the commercial sector, which can open new markets and create new jobs in the U.S.
"We've been working very closely with SpaceX, who is the industry partner on this mission," Garver said, adding that the company has been reviewing all of the flight-readiness activities that used to be NASA's job.
SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft sits atop the Falcon 9 rocket at the launch pad in Cape Canaveral, Fla. (SpaceX photo)
"The last couple of times, we came to do this within the last few months, we found specific software testing that needed to continue to be done and now we're through with that," Garver said. "I talked to the folks last night and they are ready."
Garver admitted to being "very excited" about the launch, which will usher in a new era of space travel for the U.S., one in which private companies design and build NASA's spacecraft, with the agency acting as just a single customer. With the current launch, SpaceX supplied the entire rocket, from its Merlin engines up.
"That just shows you how robust this activity is, that there are markets for launching satellites, defense payloads and NASA science payloads, in addition, to the space station, astronauts and cargo," Garver said. "That is what has allowed this company SpaceX, headed by [Chief Designer] Elon Musk, to invest in an entire rocket system with the Dragon being the test for us with this capsule."
Both the Falcon rocket and the Dragon capsule are not new systems. Both have flown into space before. But this will be the first time that Dragon will dock with the International Space Station.
Privatizing space travel will not only help NASA to save money, it will also help create new jobs for a very specialized workforce.
"The space shuttle program carried us for 30 years and we had a dedicated workforce," Garver said. "President Bush announced in 2003 that we would be retiring the Space Shuttle. [President] Obama extended it for two flights and at least a year so that people could transition. The whole idea of having a commercial company be able to launch this is to grow markets and increase our U.S., high-paying jobs in this area."
"As NASA is going farther, private industry takes this over, and that allows us to fly more often and win back market share, and hire, not only those people back, but create new jobs in an industry that doesn't just count on the government," Garver said.
Currently, two companies are vying for NASA's cargo delivery contract and four are competing for the crew delivery to the space station.
NASA is planning for its next round of competition this summer, which would lead to a private company transporting a crew to the International Space Station. The competing companies have assured NASA that private delivery of a crew could happen within three to five years.
"It's a very exciting time," Garver said.
www.federalnewsradio.com . . .
. 5 Replies to NASA takes one giant leap into commerical space flight | re: NASA takes one giant leap into commerical space flight (karma: 2)
en>fr fr>en By BurnParis Comments: 28383, member since Thu Mar 13, 2003On Thu May 17, 2012 07:05 PM
Now you'll see things advance now that the government is taking a step back and letting private industry develop this stuff. | re: NASA takes one giant leap into commerical space flight (karma: 2)
en>fr fr>en By balls Comments: 28574, member since Tue Aug 24, 2004On Thu May 17, 2012 07:34 PM
I worked at Orbital Sciences for a long time putting satellites into orbit faster, cheaper, and with more functionality than NASA ever did, and ever could. We had 3 different launch vehicles that could put up a dozen 1 million dollar-each satellites at a time that together did the job of a dozen billion-dollar NASA boondoggles.
There is NOTHING the government can do better than private profit-driven business.
Nothing. | TDL™ goes to space on new Magik Karpet® (karma: 1)
en>fr fr>en By frankthekulak  Comments: 4233, member since Tue Dec 09, 2008On Thu May 17, 2012 08:19 PM
Edited by frankthekulak (81883) on 2012-05-17 20:21:37
komrade TexanForever wrote:
After three delays, the first U.S. kommercial space flight is set to launch this week. A carpet built by the company aLLuhXok-bar will take off from Cape Canaveral moHAMed and head to the International Space Station with TDL™ Himself on board. If successful, it will be a milestone in NASA's plan to replace its space shuttle program with shatria compliant space travel. | |
re: NASA takes one giant leap into commerical space flight en>fr fr>en By mikgof Comments: 11824, member since Tue Feb 17, 2004On Fri May 18, 2012 12:59 AM
 Good news and about fucking time. America is now going to surge ahead in the exploitation of Space. All that we need now is for ESA to be privatised and Europe can get a piece of the action. | re: NASA takes one giant leap into commerical space flight en>fr fr>en By TexanForever Comments: 21031, member since Thu Jun 10, 2004On Fri May 18, 2012 06:14 AM
.
All that we need now is for ESA to be privatised
... won't happen now that the capitalist dwarf is gone and Komrade Hollande is in charge.
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