Pacific Spaceflight Is the US Arm of Copenhagen Suborbitals, a Non-Profit, DIY Manned Space Program

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Pacific Spaceflight Is the US Arm of Copenhagen Suborbitals, a Non-Profit, DIY Manned Space Program Pacific Spaceflight is the US arm of Copenhagen Suborbitals, a non-profit, DIY manned space program. Recently awarded the Fédération Aéronautique Internationale (FAI) Breitling Milestone Award, Copenhagen Suborbitals has tested many rockets and guidance systems, using liquid propellants and a unique offshore launch and recovery fleet. While in Copenhagen the focus is on launch vehicles, control systems and the capsule, Pacific Spaceflight is focused on the space suit and life-support systems. Integrating these subsystems began in August 2013, when the first-generation suit was transported to Copenhagen for a series of tests. From 2009 to present Dr. Cameron M. Smith and the Pacific Spaceflight team designed, built and tested a proof-of-concept pressure suit for use in Copenha- gen Suborbitals ‘ Tycho DSII single-person space capsule. After many success- ful tests, including underwater leak-detection, skydiving stability tests, and altitude chamber tests, we are confident of the essential design, which delivers breathing gas, mitigates carbon dioxide buildup, maintains appropriate pres- sure, and regulates the pilot’s temperature. We are currently preparing the Mark III suit for a test flight to 65,000 feet in 2015, to be carried out over international waters on the Baltic Sea. With an ascent rate of around 1,000 feet per minute, the flight should take about an hour for ascent to FL650 and somewhat longer for descent. This test flight will prove the functioning of a pressure suit to be used in Copenha- gen Suborbitals’ manned rocket flights, designed to be Tycho Deep Space II similar to the Project Mercury flights of the early 1960’s. Single-Occupant The test will also help to establish manned flight Launch - Reentry procedures, including communications, weather Crew Capsule monitoring, capsule recovery and telemetry systems. CM 0 50 100 PACSPACE PACIFIC SPACEFLIGHT CONTACT: MURO Dr. Cameron M. Smith RUPTO pacificspaceflight.com Department of Anthropology TRANS on Twitter:@Pacific_Space Portland State University 820 NW 12th Ave #104 [email protected] CAELUM F L 6 5 0 Portland, OR 97209 503-725-8463.
Recommended publications
  • Reusable Suborbital Market Characterization
    Reusable Suborbital Market Characterization Prepared by The Tauri Group for Space Florida March 2011 Introduction Purpose: Define and characterize the markets reusable suborbital vehicles will address Goals Define market categories Identify market drivers Characterize current activities Provide basis for future market forecasting (Note that this study is not a forecast) Benefits Shared understanding improves quality and productivity of industry discourse A consistent taxonomy enables communications across the community, with Congress, press, and investors Accessible information helps industry participants assess opportunities, plan and coordinate activities, seek funding, and budget Proprietary www.taurigroup.com 2 Agenda Methodology Suborbital spaceflight attributes and vehicles Value proposition Characterization and analysis of markets Commercial human spaceflight Basic and applied research Aerospace technology test and demonstration Remote sensing Education Media & PR Point-to-point transportation Conclusions Proprietary www.taurigroup.com 3 Methodology Literature review and data Analysis and findings collection Vehicles Articles, reports, and publications Payload types Available launch and research Markets datasets Opportunities Applicable payloads Challenges Initial customers Users Interviews Economic buyers Researchers Launch service providers Funding agencies Potential commercial customers Users Proprietary www.taurigroup.com 4 Reusable Suborbital Vehicles Industry catalyzed by Ansari X
    [Show full text]
  • ASK the Academy Volume 3 Anthology
    ASK THE ACADEMY VOLUME 3 ANTHOLOGY TABLE OF CONTENTS ABOUT ASK THE ACADEMY ..................................................................................................... 5 MESSAGES FROM THE ACADEMY DIRECTOR .......................................................................... 7 THE POWER OF A VISION .................................................................................................. 7 T RENDS IN PROJECT MANAGEMENT ................................................................................. 7 KNOWLEDGE EXPLOSION ................................................................................................... 8 LESSONS FROM TORINO .................................................................................................... 9 C HANGE MANAGEMENT AND ADAPTIVE CHALLENGES .................................................... 9 V IRTUAL PROJECT TEAMS AND LEARNING ..................................................................... 10 THE GOOD IDEA PARADOX .............................................................................................. 11 ACADEMY BRIEFS .................................................................................................................... 13 PM CHALLENGE LEADERSHIP ROUNDUP ....................................................................... 13 PM CHALLENGE INTERNATIONAL FORUM ROUNDUP .................................................... 14 J EAN-JACQUES DORDAIN ON GLOBAL OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES ................ 15 M ASTERS WITH MASTERS EVENT HIGHLIGHTS INTERNATIONAL
    [Show full text]
  • Danish Engineers Planning Manned Space Craft 27 August 2010, by Lin Edwards
    Danish engineers planning manned space craft 27 August 2010, by Lin Edwards exit hatch, and manual override controls for booster separation. The HEAT1X rocket (for Hybrid Exo Atmospheric Transporter) will carry the one-person capsule. It is basically a 640 mm diameter tube about 10 meters long. It will burn for around 60 seconds and provide 40 kN of thrust. The rocket was successfully tested in May this year. The Tycho Brahe-1 spacecraft is a pressurized capsule with a polymer plexiglass dome. Having Tycho Brahe spacecraft designed and build by Kristian the astronaut stand enabled them to build a smaller von Bengtson diameter rocket. According to the group's website the passenger will wear a pressure suit to control the orthostatic pressure, and their calculations indicate that "g-loads and g-load time will not (PhysOrg.com) -- A couple of Danish engineers become a problem." are working towards launching a human being into space. The designers and builders of the craft, engineers Kristian von Bengtson and Peter Madsen, belong to An unmanned test flight carrying a crash-test the SomethingAwful web community and hope to mannequin will be launched on 31 August by the show that space travel does not have to be the Danish non-profit Copenhagen Suborbitals, and if exclusive domain of groups with access to millions successful, a manned suborbital flight could follow or billions of dollars. Their entire budget was a soon after. The rocket will be launched from the mere $63,000, all of it in donations and Baltic Sea, from a floating platform towed into sponsorships, which von Bengtson (who once position by a mini-submarine, also designed and worked for NASA) said would "barely cover the cost built by the same group.
    [Show full text]
  • Lot 1 (Contract No. 30-CE-036363/00-01)
    Ref. Ares(2013)617034 - 09/04/2013 Ref. Request for Services under Framework Service Contract No. ENTR/2009/050— Lot 1 (Contract No. 30-CE-036363/00-01) EVALUATION OF THE EUROPEAN MARKET POTENTIAL FOR COMMERCIAL SPACEFLIGHT Prepared fon THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION ENTERPRISE AND INDUSTRY DIRECTORATE-GENERAL IS01 February, 2013* FINAL REPORT By Booz & Company « space-tec With contributions of ^ PARTNERS This report is protected by copyright. Reproduction is authorised provided the source is acknowledged, save where otherwise stated. Where prior permission must be obtained for the reproduction or use of textual and multimedia information (sound, images, software, etc.), such permission shall cancel the above mentioned general permission and shall clearly indicate any restrictions on use. * resubmitted on 2 8 (Ш 2013 Ref. Request for Services - Framework Contract No. ENTR/2009/050 Lot 1 - Conunercial Space Table of Contents 1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 3 L.L INDUSTRY AND MARKET ASSESSMENT 3 \2 GAP ANALYSIS AND INSTMMONAL ACTIONS 5 2 INTRGDUCTIGN 7 2.1 OBJECTIVE OF THE STUDY 7 22 STUDY SUBJECT DEFiNmoN AND яюкт BACKGROUND 7 23 STUDY APPROACH 9 2.3.1 Stakeholder consultation 10 3 HIGH-LEVEL INDUSTRY AND MARKET CHARACTERIZATION 12 3.1 INDUSTRY STRUCTURE AND EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT 12 3.1.1 Vehicle manufacturers 13 3.1.2 Spaceports 15 3.1.3 Service Operators 18 3.1.4 Insurance companies 19 3.1.5 Competitive Dynamics 20 3.1.6 External Factors 21 32 EUROPEAN SCENARIO 23 3.2.1 Vehicle developers 23 3.2.2 Air/Space Ports 24 3.2.3 Operators 25 3.2.4 External factors in Europe 25 3.2.5 U.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Sailor 900 Vsat
    PRESS RELEASE Lyngby, Denmark, July 04, 2012 THRANE & THRANE EXPANDS COPENHAGEN SUBORBITALS ROCKET LAUNCH SPONSORSHIP Radios for launch team and satcoms for media during summer of test launches Following its sponsorship of the successful Heat IX test rocket launch last summer, leading satcoms and radio systems manufacturer Thrane & Thrane has once again committed to supporting the private space flight organisation Copenhagen Suborbitals by providing hard wearing SAILOR portable and fixed VHF radios for use during three planned test rocket launches from the Danish sector of the Baltic Sea in July and August 2012. In addition to supplying SAILOR SP3530 Portable VHF ATEX for use by the launch team, Thrane & Thrane will also supply fixed and portable SAILOR VHF radios for the ‘back-end’ team. Additionally, the sponsorship includes installation of a SAILOR 250 FleetBroadband aboard the Royal Danish Naval Homeguard vessel ‘Hjortoe’, which will be supporting the launch programme for the second year in a row and providing a base for high profile Danish website and magazine Ingenioeren to live blog to an expected 50,000 enthusiasts around the world during the rocket launches. The LIVE coverage of each launch attempt can be accessed through http://www.thrane.com/About/Sponsorships “Based on our experience of using SAILOR radios for last year’s launch we know the excellent reliability and quality they provide, and are confident of our ability to communicate even when we are working on the hazardous launch platform,” comments Kristian von Bengtson,
    [Show full text]
  • Rocketplane XP Technical & Programmatic Overview
    SpaceplanesSpaceplanes && SpaceportsSpaceports –– TheThe NextNext GenerationGeneration ofof AerospaceAerospace TransportationTransportation Gdansk International Air & Space Law Conference November 15, 2013 This Document contains Proprietary Information of Rocketplane Global, Inc. Disclosure to others, use or copying without the express written authorization of Rocketplane Global, Inc. is strictly prohibited. Current Suborbital Flight Markets Source: FAA/AST – SpaceFlorida Suborbital Market Study by Tauri Group, July 2012 Suborbital Space Vehicles Space Ship 2 ©Virgin Galactic LynX ©XCOR SOST ©Armadillo Aerospace New Shepard ©Blue Origin RocketplaneXP ©Rocketplane Xogdor ©Masten Space Systems TBN ©EADS Astrium Swiss Space Systems Enterprise ©Project Enterprise Heart ©Copenhagen Suborbitals The Rocketplane Flight Profile The “Astronaut Line” 328K’/100 KM Altitude RocketRocket Motor CutCut Off Off (MECO) 4 4 The Blackness of Space The Curvature of the Earth Weightlessness Full-Surround SPACE VISION The View From 100 km 5 Interior•Chief Designed of Design by Frank for Nokia Nuovo •Design Director for BMW/Designworks XP Vehicle Specifications Cockpit Crew 1 Seating Capacity 6 (5 passengers + pilot) Seat Pitch 36 in (0.91 m) Takeoff Field Length 9200 ft (2800 m) Landing Field Length 4300 ft (1300 m) Max. Altitude 340,000 ft (104 km) Mission Time (G Time) 45 min (3+ min) Jet Engine Type GE J-85 w/ AB Rocket Engine Type Polaris AR-36 12’ 29’ 45’ 6 Systems Overview Electrical Power Kerosene System Tank Liquid Oxygen Tank Rocket Propulsion System
    [Show full text]
  • It's Just Rocket Science, Not Project Management
    Downloaded from orbit.dtu.dk on: Sep 25, 2021 It's Just Rocket Science, Not Project Management Vangsgaard, Mikkel; Thuesen, Christian Published in: Working Paper Proceedings - Engineering Project Organization Conference (EPOC) 2015 Publication date: 2015 Document Version Publisher's PDF, also known as Version of record Link back to DTU Orbit Citation (APA): Vangsgaard, M., & Thuesen, C. (2015). It's Just Rocket Science, Not Project Management. In C. Dossick, & G. Macht (Eds.), Working Paper Proceedings - Engineering Project Organization Conference (EPOC) 2015 General rights Copyright and moral rights for the publications made accessible in the public portal are retained by the authors and/or other copyright owners and it is a condition of accessing publications that users recognise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. Users may download and print one copy of any publication from the public portal for the purpose of private study or research. You may not further distribute the material or use it for any profit-making activity or commercial gain You may freely distribute the URL identifying the publication in the public portal If you believe that this document breaches copyright please contact us providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Working Paper Proceedings Engineering Project Organization Conference The University of Edinburgh, Scotland, UK June 24-26, 2015 It’s Just Rocket Science, Not Project Management Mikkel Vangsgaard, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark Christian Thesen, Technical University of Denmark, Denmark Proceedings Editors Carrie Dossick, University of Washington and Gretchen Macht, Pennsylvania State University © Copyright belongs to the authors.
    [Show full text]
  • Private Human Access to Space Volume 1: Suborbital Flights
    PRIVATE HUMAN ACCESS TO SPACE VOLUME 1: SUBORBITAL FLIGHTS International Academy of Astronautics Notice: The cosmic study or position paper that is the subject of this report was approved by the Board of Trustees of the International Academy of Astronautics (IAA). Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the sponsoring or funding organizations. For more information about the International Academy of Astronautics, visit the IAA home page at www.iaaweb.org. Copyright 2014 by the International Academy of Astronautics. All rights reserved. The International Academy of Astronautics (IAA), a non-governmental organization recognized by the United Nations, was founded in 1960. The purposes of the IAA are to foster the development of astronautics for peaceful purposes, to recognize individuals who have distinguished themselves in areas related to astronautics, and to provide a program through which the membership can contribute to international endeavors and cooperation in the advancement of aerospace activities. © International Academy of Astronautics (IAA) June 2014 Title: Private Human Access to Space Volume 1: Suborbital Flights Edited by Angie Bukley and Walter Peeters Printing of this cosmic study was sponsored by IISC (Douglas, Isle of Man) International Academy of Astronautics 6 rue Galilée, BP 1268-16, 75766 Paris Cedex 16, France Cover Illustration: Silverbird II (credit: by Ondrej Doule, Space Innovations) PRIVATE HUMAN ACCESS TO SPACE VOLUME 1: SUBORBITAL FLIGHTS Editors: Angie Bukley Walter Peeters Private Human Access to Space: Vol. 1 - Suborbital Flights Table of Content Executive Summary .......................................................................................................................................... 1 1. Introduction Objectives and Scope of the Report ........................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Amateurs in Space
    AMATEURS IN SPACE Amateurs in Space is a story of two friends, Peter and Kristian, DIRECTORS NOTE and their shared boyhood dream of traveling into space in their own Seven years ago, Peter and Kristian told me they wanted to build home-built space rocket. If they succeed, the two Danes will write a space rocket and send Peter out into Space. I figured that was a themselves into the annals of history as the world’s first amateurs great idea. Then I asked them whether it was possible. Practically to go into space. But the two enthusiasts soon realize that rocket speaking. They answered: ”yes” and I immediately went to get my science is the least of their problems. camera. Since then I have never doubted that they were going to succeed. AMATEURS IN SPACE is the story of one of mankind’s greatest dreams and how to make it come true in your own unique way. It’s a Afterwards many intelligent people have told med, ”Well, Max… you film for everyone who likes to be entertained and marvel at human do realize it is not possible to build your own space rocket and send derring-do and relentless striving – onward and upward. it out into space, right?”. This has of course made me a bit doubtful. And I have said to myself many times, that Peter and Kristian had to It’s a humoristic story about Peter Madsen and Kristian von Bengt- be the exception. son working hard to make their dreams come true. They are building But it is a fact, that not all turned out as planned.
    [Show full text]
  • Copenhagen Suborbitals
    Project SPECTRA Experimental evaluation of a Liquid storable propellant Copenhagen Suborbitals Author: Peter Madsen, Head of working group propulsion at CS Revision: 1.0 Revision date: 2012-09-11 Status: Released Project SPECTRA r1.0 1.1 Document history Date Revision Editor Changes 2012-09-11 1.0 Peter Madsen Released according to review by Thomas Petersen Page 2 of 27 Project SPECTRA r1.0 2 Contents Project SPECTRA ................................................................................................................................................ 1 Copenhagen Suborbitals.................................................................................................................................... 1 1.1 Document history .............................................................................................................................. 2 2 Contents .................................................................................................................................................... 3 3 Preface ....................................................................................................................................................... 4 4 Motivation ................................................................................................................................................. 4 5 Liquid propellants ...................................................................................................................................... 4 5.1 Example ............................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Boosting the Private Space Industry: Extending NASA's Duty-Free Import
    William & Mary Business Law Review Volume 6 (2015) Issue 1 Article 10 February 2015 Boosting the Private Space Industry: Extending NASA’s Duty-Free Import Exemption to Commercial Space Companies Katherine Gustafson Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmblr Part of the International Business Commons, and the International Trade Law Commons Repository Citation Katherine Gustafson, Boosting the Private Space Industry: Extending NASA’s Duty-Free Import Exemption to Commercial Space Companies, 6 Wm. & Mary Bus. L. Rev. 325 (2015), https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmblr/vol6/iss1/10 Copyright c 2015 by the authors. This article is brought to you by the William & Mary Law School Scholarship Repository. https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/wmblr BOOSTING THE PRIVATE SPACE INDUSTRY: EXTENDING NASA’S DUTY-FREE IMPORT EXEMPTION TO COMMERCIAL SPACE COMPANIES * KATHERINE GUSTAFSON ABSTRACT The United States has a strong reputation for being at the forefront of space exploration. The commercial space industry in the United States is flourishing, yet the United States government is not effectively using its resources to help the industry. Currently, the United States government has some policies in place that promote the private space sector. Nonethe- less, the government favors its own failing agency, NASA, by giving it extra benefits in the form of exemptions from import duties. Extending an exemp- tion from import duties to the commercial space industry, however, would have several beneficial effects on the United States that the government should want to pursue: (1) production costs for producers would decrease, leading to lower costs for consumers and a more productive industry; (2) space “production” would increase and would help the United States keep its place at the forefront of the space community in the face of rapidly increas- ing competition; and (3) the United States would be better prepared for the innovative and sophisticated space endeavors that we are likely to see in the future.
    [Show full text]
  • ARTE EN ÓRBITA Post-Colonial Space Exploration at the Equator
    DasQuestões,n#6, setembro/dezembro, 2018 ARTE EN ÓRBITA Post-colonial space exploration at the Equator - 2015 "volveré y seré millones!! tupak katari Arte en Órbita (Art in Orbit) is an exhibition curated by Pedro Soler and Fabiane Borges that was first shown in the Centro de Arte Contemporaneo de Quito in Ecuador from the 7th of March to the 6th of June of 2015. The exhibition, with over 30 groups and artists participating, focusses on subaltern or peripheral space exploration from the ancestral to the contemporary, from art experiments to launching satellites. The participants are principally from South America but projects from Africa, Asia and Europe are also featured. Our contemporary imaginary of space has been dominated by the space race and the cold war of the twentieth century, super powers and menacing aliens. This exhibition seeks to reappraise this imaginary in the light of postcolonial thinking, open software and hardware, the anthropocene and art, because how we see space is how we see ourselves. This intimacy of space and earth, the overview effect felt by many astronauts, is a continual thread throughout the exhibition and already appears in the first works of the exhibition, 3 reproductions of Simone Chambelland's seminal 1970 space prints. In two of them we see enigmatic missile or rocket like forms floating above the earth, in the third, entitled "University of Space, we see a space station covered with antennas, announcing another theme of the exhibition, the antenna, the ability to listen and observe, key to our relationship with space. Simone was a French artist who emigrated to Chile in 1939 and died there in 2013.
    [Show full text]