Patrick G. Mahoney
Associate editor
In 2001, the first paying passenger
traveled into space aboard a Soyuz
space capsule. Four short years
later, SpaceShipOne proved that a
private company could make space
travel possible. Suddenly, space
tourism didn’t seem so crazy.
SpaceShipOne fired the imagination
of millions. But that was nothing compared to what’s next.
Get ready for SpaceShipTwo.
WAITING FOR A WHITE KNIGHT
Virgin Galactic, the world’s first
space line, recently unveiled a model
of what may be the next big thing in
space travel: WhiteKnightTwo and
SpaceShipTwo. Virgin Galactic was formed in 2004 by SpaceShipOne
designer Burt Rutan and Richard
Branson, owner of Virgin Atlantic
Airways. Galactic placed an order
for the construction of five suborbital
ships with Rutan’s company,
Scaled Composites LLC, Mojave,
Calif. And prospective passengers
plunked down $190,000 apiece for the privilege of being the first tourists
in space.
Passengers will get three days
of training in weightlessness and
the g loads of space flight before the
60-ft long SpaceShipTwo carries
six of them plus two pilots about
62 miles above the Earth.
WhiteKnightTwo (the mother ship), a twin-fuselage airplane
with a single 140-ft wingspan, and
SpaceShipTwo will fly a different
profile than SpaceShipOne. Instead
of ascending straight up to launch
altitude, the new plane will take
off over land and fly to a launch
point over the Pacific Ocean.
There, WhiteKnightTwo will release
SpaceShipTwo so it can fire
its rocket engine. SpaceShipTwo
will reenter the atmosphere some
20 miles from where it took off and
glide to a landing at Mojave Spaceport.
From takeoff to touchdown,
the flight will cover 200 miles.
In January, Virgin Galactic President
Will Whitehorn said WhiteKnightTwo
was more than 70%
complete, while SpaceShipTwo was
about 60% finished. Scaled Composites
hopes to begin test flights
this summer.
Want to hitch a ride into space?
Tickets for Virgin Galactic’s 2.5-hr
flight are now going for $200,000.
But Branson’s company is not the
only one with its head above the
atmosphere.
Rocket Woman
Reda Anderson expects to be
Rocketplane Inc.’s first passenger.
The Oklahoma City-based company
is splicing together two Lear jet
25 fuselages to make room for
the kerosene and liquid oxygen
tanks that will power a 36,000-lbthrust
rocket engine. The Lear’s
horizontal stabilizers will be replaced
with a V-tail to help raise
the nose when it’s loaded with
fuel. And a delta-shaped wing assembly
will replace the standard
wings. Tickets will cost $225,000 to
$300,000, depending on how soon
passengers fly and where they sit.
The Lear jet 25’s twin GE CJ610
jet engines will power the spaceship
to a launch altitude of 25,000 ft.
There, the pilot will shut down
the jets and fire the rocket engine
for a 70-sec, 4-g boost into space
and a maximum speed three and
a half times the speed of sound.
After shutting down the rocket,
passengers will experience 4 min
of weightlessness and a view they won’t get anywhere else (unless
they’re double booked with Virgin
Galactic, that is).
Computerized flight controls
will let Rocketplane XP’s pilot navigate
the dynamic pressure and
supersonic speeds of reentry. The
RCS (Reaction Control System),
interacting with the ship’s aerodynamic-
control surfaces through its
flight path outside the atmosphere
and on the way back down, will
provide seamless control, says the
company. Computers will fly the
ship from boost to reentry, with
the pilot taking over only in an
emergency and for landings. At
20,000 ft, the pilot will restart the
jet engines for a powered landing.
Total flight time: 1 hr.
Rocketplane’s plan to bolt
two salvaged fuselages together
and use a liquid-fuel rocket engine
and fly-by-wire controls to
guide the ship is the brainchild of Mitchell Burnside Clapp, an aerospace
engineer and former test pilot
instructor. Burnside Clapp,
Robert Zubrin, and Chuck Lauer
formed Pioneer Rocketplane in
1996. Zubrin left two years later.
Under the direction of new president
George French, the company
sought a new prize: the so-called O (for Oklahoma) Prize.
In an effort to grab a piece of the
space-tourism pie, Oklahoma offered
transferable tax credits worth
$18 million to any Oklahoma based
space-launch company
with at least $10 million of capital,
among other criteria. Rocketplane,
the winner, sold the tax credits for $13 million and the XP taxied
closer to takeoff.
The Lear jet on which the XP
is based could take 3+ gs and had
an operational ceiling around
50,000 ft. The new delta-wing assembly
and V-tail will let the craft
handle 4 gs. Rocketplane’s designers
replaced the engine inlets, nose,
and leading edges of the delta wing
with steel or titanium to protect
against the heat of reentry.
The ship, which will weigh
19,500 lb at takeoff compared
with the Lear jet 25’s 15,000 lb, will
need something extra to get off
the ground. Fortunately for Rocketplane,
the former Strategic Air
Command base (now Oklahoma
Spaceport) in Burns Flat, Okla., has
a 13,500-ft runway. XP’s Aircraft
Rocket-36 will deliver 36,000 lb of
thrust on liquid oxygen and kerosene.
Regenerative cooling, which
circulates kerosene along the combustion chamber’s outer wall before
it’s burned, will make it possible for
the engine to fire many times with
little maintenance, similar to a jet
engine.
According to Dave Faulkner, XP
program manager, Rocketplane
is “approaching a preliminary design
review for the whole vehicle,
but many of the systems are past
this point in the design stage.” The
company hopes to put passengers
into space beginning in 2010.
Blooming in the desert
The Mojave, Calif., area is shaping
up as a busy place for rockets.
XCOR Aerospace, in Mojave, is
working on its own two-seat rocket
plane. Like Rocketplane XP, it will
launch from a runway, but without
jet engines.
XCOR’s first foray, the entirely
rocket-powered EZ-Rocket (now
retired), was a manned technology demonstrator for future vehicles. It
flew 26 times using twin XR-4A3
(XCOR’s 400-lb thrust LOX/alcohol)
engines in both up-and-away
and cross-country mode. The alcohol
was stored in an external composite
fuel tank, and the LOX in
an internal, insulated, aluminum
liquid-oxygen tank. The engines
and igniters used during the flight test
program proved reliable, reusable,
and restartable in-flight, says
the company. The XR-4A3 engines
made nearly 700 runs for a total of
more than 165 min.
The EZ-Rocket was a modified
Long-EZ home-built airplane with a
canard layout, chosen for its pusher
configuration and power-off glide
capability. The Long-EZ was designed
by Burt Rutan. EZ-Rocket
pilots restarted the engines in midflight
and performed touch-and
goes, both firsts for rocket-powered
aircraft. EZ-Rocket attained a maximum altitude of 11,500 ft.
While the EZ-Rocket helped
work out the kinks in routine
rocket-powered flight, the company’s
ultimate goal is profitable
transportation to Earth orbit. The
initial target, to reduce per-flight
costs to below $2,000, was reached
and costs dropped to about $900.
The groundbreaking EZ-Rocket
went from paper to flight in only
nine months.
XCOR has already begun preliminary
design of its next craft,
a suborbital vehicle called Xerus.
The single-stage suborbital vehicle
is designed for research, space
tourism, and transporting microsatellites
to low Earth orbit via a
small secondary stage.
NASCAR without the track
Another opportunity for XCOR
landed when The Rocket Racing
League asked it to design and
build an evolved EZ-Rocket for the first generation of X-Racers. The
proposed league will race rocket powered
aircraft (X-Racers) using
liquid oxygen/kerosene fuel with
a burn time of 4 min. Races will
take place on a course 2 miles long,
1 mile wide, and 1,500 ft in the air.
Spectators will watch the 1-hr-long
race from multiple camera views.
Velocity of Sebastian, Fla., will
build airframes to carry the XCOR
XR-4K14 1,500-lb-thrust rockets.
An LOX tank will replace the rear
seats and strake tanks will store
fuel. A rocket propellant piston
pump will eliminate the pressurized
fuel belly tank used on the
EZ-Rocket.
The X-Racers will feature a single
engine and a much brighter
kerosene-burning plume. The
single-pilot vehicles will have a
gross takeoff weight of 3,000 lb,
half of which is propellant weight.
The first-generation Mark-1 XRacers
will reach speeds of up to 230 mph, limited by airframe
safety, not engine power. Electric
ignition will start and stop the engine
in flight, resulting in alternating
3.5-min engine boosts and
15-min glides.
In 2003, XCOR finished development
of its third-generation
igniter and tested an 1,800-lbthrust
LOX/kerosene engine,
the same class of engine that will
power Xerus. XCOR developed
the XR-4K14, a 1,500-lb-thrust
regeneratively cooled LOX and
pump-fed kerosene engine, and
the rocket propellant piston pump
that power the X-Racer. The same
company built the initial version
of a 7,500 lb-ft LOX/methane engine
for NASA’s Crew Exploration
Vehicle.
Perhaps one of these companies
will emerge as the premier space line
serving the space-tourism
industry, but then space, like the
future, is a pretty big place.