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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

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Suborbital science goes public

Posted: Monday, November 23, 2009 8:45 PM by Alan Boyle

 
Blue Origin
  Click for video:
New Shepard flies in Blue
Origin video from 2006,
used with permission.

Amazon.com billionaire Jeff Bezos' usually secretive Blue Origin rocket venture raised the curtain today on three research experiments that are slated to take suborbital journeys on its prototype spaceship in two years' time.

For years, Blue Origin has been working on a vertical-launched rocket that could someday take passengers on an automated trip beyond 62 miles (100 kilometers) in altitude. That's beyond the boundary of outer space - at a height where passengers could see the blue, curving Earth beneath the blackness of space, and experience a few minutes of weightlessness.

Blue Origin's engineers have flown their New Shepard prototype craft through several low-altitude tests at Bezos' hush-hush launch facility near Van Horn, Texas. But details about any of the tests beyond the first one have been hard to come by.

For the past year, the venture has been working with planetary scientist (and former NASA science official) Alan Stern on a plan to put experimental packages on New Shepard, even before people fly on it. Stern has touted suborbital research as a "killer app" for private-sector spacecraft, and he is organizing a seminar in February to help get the ball rolling.

Today's announcement is notable not just because it represents a rare update from Blue Origin, but also because it marks a step forward for suborbital science. "This is the first time that a next-gen suborbital company has selected payloads to fly in space," Stern told me.

The three experiments are:

  • "Three-Dimensional Critical Wetting Experiment in Microgravity." Principal investigator:  Stephen Collicott of Purdue University. Collicott's research focuses on how fluids behave in zero-gravity environments. Such studies are crucial for propulsion system design.

  • "Microgravity Experiment on Dust Environments in Astrophysics" (MEDEA). Principal investigator: Joshua Colwell, of the University of Central Florida. As described in this UCF news release, Colwell's experiment is aimed at shedding light on the process by which space dust builds up to form planets, or the rings around those planets.

  • "Effective lnterfacial Tension lnduced Convection" (EITIC). Principal investigator: John Pojman, of Louisiana State University. Pojman concentrates on the interaction of fluids in zero-G. In August, he chatted with me about his research and how tough it can be to get experiments into space.

Blue Origin has said that the first experiments could fly during New Shepard's unmanned testing phase in 2011, and that experiments requiring human tending could be taken up starting in 2012. That schedule is still operative, but it's too early to be more specific about the launch timing, Stern told me.

No money would be exchanged for flying these experiments. Stern said the researchers would provide the apparatus in containers ranging up to the size of a small chest of drawers (technically speaking, the equivalent of one to three shuttle middeck lockers). Blue Origin would provide the ride as a demonstration of its vehicle's research capability.

Blue Origin isn't alone in the suborbital research market. For example, Collicott is working with Texas-based Armadillo Aerospace to fly a shoebox-sized fluid-mechanics experiment. Virgin Galactic, Masten Space Systems and XCOR Aerospace say they're also planning to send research packages into space.

Researchers hope that private-sector spaceships will provide more opportunities for sending experiments into zero-G. Space entrepreneurs, meanwhile, hope the research market will provide more of a market for their shiny new rocket ships. But will it work out that way? Blue Origin's announcement demonstrates once again that the two-year rule of commercial spaceflight is still in effect. When will the rule be broken? Feel free to weigh in with your comments below.


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Comments

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the costs of these suborbital vehicles are very high and the number of possible experiments is very little, so, it never can become a profitable business

they are only a very expensive "game" for rich men (Blue Origin for Bezos and Virgin Galactic for Branson)

however, these days, not only the smaller "space guys" but also the (much bigger and older) US space agency is in serious throuble!

and the results of the Augustine Commission CAN'T HELP it to find the right way, as explained here:

http://www.ghostnasa.com/posts2/056hsfreport.html

also, there is a BIG MYSTERY around the SRB-5 and Ares 1-X tests, since SEVERAL WEEKS after them, NASA and ATK haven't STILL released the TRUE and FULL data of the tests and that could mean that they have FAILED their goals, as explained here:

http://www.ghostnasa.com/posts2/057afailedtest.html

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please note that 90% or more of the possible 100+ km. altitude's experiments can't be accomplished with this kind of vehicles because, the propellants burned, changes entirely the (chemical and physical) environment, these experiments, are going to study

.
is Gary Hudson somehow involved with Bezos?

that thing looks a lot like ROTON without the helicopter/whirlygig attached.

maybe Bezos gets points for recycling.

Rocketeering Pretenders...
great for the private sector and of utility for the public sector too

though unlikely in the lifetime of most of us this star we now inhabit will naturally blow up, need to plan for survival of those then living inhabitants, utilize existing physics to do so?
Thanks for the interesting news.  It's great to see some signs of life from Blue  Origin.  I do worry about the 2-year rule, though.  I'd say the field is still wide open as to who will get there first.
It's hard to believe that Blue Origin is as close to suborbital flight as this announcement implies. As far as we know they haven't flown anything in over three years. Any significant tests of their vehicle would require an FAA permit and would become public knowledge. They may have conducted short, low altitude tests under the new amateur rules that Armadillo and Masten have taken advantage of. But given the size of their vehicle, the FAA-imposed amateur impulse limit of 200,000 pound-seconds would only allow a very short flight.
More amateur rocketry Alan?  Suborbital research, been there done that for almost the past 50 years.  Not as exciting as what the real space pros are doing at the International Space Station and the Ssuttle Atlantis.  Wake us up when the amteur ropcketeers do something really impressive, like get a spaceship into space.
whassupwit the ads?

c'mon, Alan...click a pic and get ads that last longer than it takes to read the piece...a few seconds of the Bezos Bomb, and then starts running more ads...

you will lose my interest pretty quickly this way...it doesn't say click to see toothbrush ads and video...

anyone else feel manipulated?
"the costs of these suborbital vehicles are very high and the number of possible experiments is very little, so, it never can become a profitable business "

That's not correct.
As both Will Whitehorn of Galactic and Jeff Greason of XCOR have indicated earlier this year, the amount of interest in this type of microg access is growing; and both Galactic and Blue Origin have announced their first research payloads just this past week.  And NASA's program to explicitly encourage research use of these vehicles (not just the two mentioned, but reusable suborbital vehicles in general) hasn't  even kicked in yet. Much of the microgravity research community has been 'decimated' (the word one researcher I know uses) the last several years due to NASA's cutting back research.  The NASA program will not only try to help reinvigorate that community by helping with access to 3-4 minutes of high-quality micro-g, it will try to help expand the markets available as well.

And micro-g isn't the only research area.  In the next two months NASA will be talking, for example, to the atmospheric research community, including probably universities, NOAA, and the military,

And that doesn't include what is often derided as the 'tourism' market, which NASA is not involved in, since the companies appear to be doing just fine.

The early NACA pushed early on for the government to encourage mail by air to help create the American airline (and, airliner) industry, before they even had their first wind tunnel.  Even more than money, companies need to know there are customers out there; and direct indications are already being seen that there are markets (plural).  Alan Stern's February conference in Boulder is being co-sponsored by NASA, and the Agency's hope is to have members of several different research communities participating.  
"please note that 90% or more of the possible 100+ km. altitude's experiments can't be accomplished with this kind of vehicles because, the propellants burned, changes entirely the (chemical and physical) environment, these experiments, are going to study"


Are you under the impression that sensors and samplers are going to be placed down in the vehicle's exhaust and wake, when under acceleration? (This might have mattered for Robert Goddard's first rocket...)

If this is an issue here, why is it not one for unmanned sounding rockets? Or winged air sampling vehicles? You don't much care how your exhaust is affecting atmospheric chemistry *behind* you...


"maybe Bezos gets points for recycling. "

Nah, it only means that VTVL vehicles tend toward similar-looking solutions (cones of one angle or another). That he has a lot of former DC-X people working for him is no secret. And when I first saw New Shepard, I immediately thought of this:

http://www.uchumaru.com/

And this:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reusable_Vehicle_Testing

...and many similar proposals:

http://www.astronautix.com/lvfam/vtovl.htm
rich people are gonna jump all over that one.
"rich people are gonna jump all over that one. "


Cool.

It wouldn't be the first time NON-rich people made some money providing a premium product or service to people of means. Ask anyone who works on a Lincoln/Cadillac assembly line, on a cruise ship, or is a jeweler (and would be laid off/unemployed, if 'rich people' didn't continue to 'jump all over' what they offer)...

And it won't build up to something you and I might have a chance at affording, if not for wealthy 'early adopters.'


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