On February 04 2016 23:29 Oshuy wrote: Not half the launches, not half the market, but maybe half the number of satellites.
Yes, this makes more sense, SpaceX is still nowhere near the launch cadence they need to achieve half the launches, it's possible due to reusability but it's still a long road ahead. Maybe they'll hit a quarter of them in the first year that they start reusing all of their rockets, hopefully by next year they're flying more reused rockets than new.
PARIS —The Luxembourg government on Feb. 3 announced it would seek to jump-start an industrial sector to mine asteroid resources in space by creating regulatory and financial incentives.
The incentives include co-investment in research and development and, eventually, direct capital investment in space resource-mining companies setting up shop in Luxembourg.
Announced by Vice Prime Minister Etienne Schneider, who is also the nation’s economics minister, the initiative has already lured U.S.-based Deep Space Industries of Mountain View, California, to create a Luxembourg subsidiary. Schneider said other U.S. companies, including SpaceX of Hawthorne, California, and Planetary Resources of Redmond, Washington, are in talks with Luxembourg authorities regarding the Spaceresources.lu venture.
And it could give SpaceX, which is already scheduled to launch more than half of the world's commercial satellite missions this year, [...].
This is real? SpaceX already has more than half of the commercial launch market? Wow didn't realize that.
Not half of the commercial launch market: "more than half of the world's commercial satellite missions".
If you take a look at the known schedules https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2016_in_spaceflight, I guess the "more than half" comes from the launch of clusters of Iridium Next satellites (10 satellites per launch).
Not half the launches, not half the market, but maybe half the number of satellites.
WASHINGTON — SpaceX plans to ramp up the production and launch of its Falcon 9 rocket this year while introducing its Falcon Heavy rocket and completing a key test of its commercial crew vehicle, the company’s president said Feb. 3.
“It’s a really interesting year for us,” Gwynne Shotwell said in a speech at the Federal Aviation Administration’s annual Commercial Space Transportation Conference, citing work on the company’s launch vehicles, Dragon spacecraft and launch facilities.
One area of emphasis was accelerating the production and launch rate for the Falcon 9. “We’ve had the luxury in years past of having to build only a few rockets a year,” she said, “so we really weren’t in a production mode.” Last year would have been the first to require a high production rate of the rocket, she said, had it not been for the June launch failure that halted flights for nearly six months.
“Now we’re in this factory transformation to go from building six or eight a year to about 18 cores a year. By the end of this year we should be at over 30 cores per year,” she said. “So you see the factory start to morph.”
Those changes, she said, include doubling the number of first stages that can be assembled at one time from three to six. The company is also working to accelerate production of the Merlin engines that power the Falcon 9 since, at the higher production rates planned for this year, the company will need to build hundreds of engines a year.
i wonder both if and when factory production will begin in Mexico.
1st the Featherweight world title in 13 seconds .. and now the lightweight title; and the McG brand is moving on to space travel. Conor is right..we have entered the Mcgregor era.
On January 21 2016 12:22 misirlou wrote: e: the new planet theory sounds pretty cool, not sure if the researchers got really lucky to find the orbital anomaly on those smaller bodies or if it exists in several other bodies that weren't noticed/found. Hope they can find the planet to prove it, now that we have an idea of it's orbit it shouldn't take very long
Keep in mind that the distance from the sun is VERY large, so it will not get alot of light making it incredibly hard to spot, especially if it is colored dark blue like Neptune. Space mechanics are pretty rigid, so scientists should have a rough idea where the planet is now.
For an object that far, you do not look for the light of the sun reflected on the planet. You detect the stars in the background vanishing as the object passes in front of them.
We'd be able to see Planet Nine by imaging it directly (especially in infrared).
Virgin Galactic, the privately-funded space company owned by Virgin Group and Abu Dhabi's Aabar Investments PJS, today unveiled its newly completed SpaceShipTwo.
The rollout ceremony was attended by Sir Richard Branson and his family, Virgin Galactic's Future Astronauts, and partners. Professor Stephen Hawking named the new vehicle Virgin Spaceship (VSS) Unity via a recorded speech and said, "I would be very proud to fly on this spaceship."
The ceremony featured four generations of Sir Richard's family, from his mother Eve, Richard himself, his son Sam, to his grandchild Eva Deia who celebrated her first birthday by christening the spaceship in the traditional way but with milk in place of bubbly. The ceremony also included a video congratulations from Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai emphasizing the importance of space to science and technical education.
The new SpaceShipTwo is the first vehicle to be manufactured by The Spaceship Company, Virgin Galactic's wholly owned manufacturing arm, and is the second vehicle of its design ever constructed. VSS Unity was unveiled in Mojave at FAITH (Final Assembly Integration Test Hangar), the home of manufacturing and testing for Virgin Galactic's human space flight program. VSS Unity featured a new silver and white livery and was guided into position by one of the company's support Range Rovers, provided by its exclusive automotive partner Land Rover.
WASHINGTON — For the second consecutive year, the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency’s top-funded space program is an experimental spaceplane intended to make frequent trips to orbit.
DARPA asked for $50 million in the Pentagon’s 2017 budget request for its Experimental Spaceplane 1, or XS-1 program. That’s up from a $30 million the agency asked for during the fiscal year 2016 budget cycle.
XS-1 aims to develop a reusable first stage that could carry an expendable upper stage capable of placing payloads weighing up to 1,800 kilograms into orbit. DARPA said the vehicle could ultimately fly 10 times in 10 days and boost payloads into low Earth orbit for less than $5 million per launch.
Three industry teams are working on the program: Boeing and Blue Origin; Masten Space Systems and XCOR Aerospace; and Northrop Grumman and Virgin Galactic.
In July, all three teams received funding to continue design work and risk reduction activities in preparation for a production contract.
DARPA said in 2014 it intended to pick one team in 2015 to work toward demonstration flight in 2018, but now it is unclear when such a downselect will occur.
Elon Musk, CEO of both electric automaker Tesla and rocket manufacturer SpaceX, splits his time between his two companies, which he also co-founded and financed with most of his early fortune from Paypal. Now Electrek has learned through sources that Musk will not be the only executive dividing his time between Tesla and SpaceX since the CEO hired Apple’s alloy expert Charles Kuehmann to lead materials engineering at both companies.
Kuehmann is now Vice-President of Materials Engineering at Tesla and SpaceX, where he is responsible for delivering materials innovations, something he is very familiar with after over two decades spent in materials science.
In what has been a major period of work for the company, Orbital ATK is nearing the finish line in terms of returning their Antares rocket to flight.
Currently headed toward a date of 31 May 2016 for the launch of the OA-5 Cygnus mission to the International Space Station (ISS), Antares Deputy Program Manager, Kurt Eberly, in an exclusive interview with NASASpaceflight.com, stated that NASA has indicated that the mission will likely move to the end of June due to ISS schedule constraints.
While the final considerations for the launch date occur in the coming weeks and months, Mr. Eberly stated that the company is continuing to process toward the 31 May launch date to be ready to go in case they are needed at that time.
is that still happening ? or is it out of the question based on this quote from Musk "The rocket may have been able to blast off today if not for the stray boat, SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk suggested."
I'm glad you are here to insinuate that a launcher with 20 successful launches to space is unusable. Otherwise we might be duped into thinking that a mere 20 launches would qualify as "usable".
After all, no other rocket launch has ever been delayed.
I'll clarify my exact comments even though its in the post directly above mine and my comment is related and interacts with the post above mine on several different points. Furthermore, its in the link i provided. That aside...
For maximum clarity:
The cryogenic propellant is new. its never been used before. Thus i state, the cryogenic propellant must be usable before it can ever be re-usable.
or as i stated previously. before something is re-usable.. it first must be usable.
beyond all that my question still remains unanswered. are they launching today?
edit: i found the answer to this question myself "No new target date was immediately set, but the Eastern Range said a fourth attempt to launch the SES-9 satellite would not occur before Tuesday."