SpaceX Hits the Mark with Launch
Elon Musk's private enterprise spaceflight company successfully blasts a Malaysian remote sensing satellite into orbit in a landmark mission for SpaceX, which is scheduled to ferry astronauts and crew to the International Space Station after the shuttle fleet is retired at the end of 2010.
Space Exploration Technologies, aka SpaceX, the private enterprise spaceflight
company founded by PayPal co-founder Elon Musk, successfully launched a
Malaysian satellite into orbit July 13 using the company's Falcon 1 rocket.
After four Falcon 1 test launches-three unsuccessful-the July 13 effort
represented the first SpaceX venture to take a functional satellite into space.
The launch of Malaysia's remote sensing RazakSAT satellite marks a critical
milestone for SpaceX, which in 2006 won a $1.6
billion NASA contract to design, build and operate a resupply program for the
ISS (International Space Station). Under the contract, SpaceX will fill the
gap in American spaceflight to the ISS after the shuttle fleet retires at the
end of the 2010 and the Ares/Orion begins in 2016.
The Falcon 1 rocket blasted off at approximately 11:30
p.m. EDT and took 8.5 minutes to
climb into space. The liftoff was from the U.S. Army's Ronald Reagan Ballistic Missile
Defense Test Site on Omelek Island
in the Kwajalein Atoll, about 2,500 miles southwest of Hawaii.
SpaceX made space history in 2008 when its Falcon 1 became the first privately
developed liquid-fuel rocket to orbit the Earth. The Falcon is a two-stage
launch vehicle powered by liquid oxygen and rocket-grade kerosene. According to
SpaceX's Website, the Falcon 1's tank structure is made of aluminum-lithium alloy, and "the interstage, which connects the upper
and lower stage for Falcon 9 [and Falcon 1], is a carbon fiber aluminum core composite
structure."
According to SpaceX, its Merlin engine is the highest-performance gas generator
cycle kerosene engine ever built, exceeding the Boeing Delta II main engine,
the Lockheed Atlas II main engine and the Saturn V F-1.
Riding atop the Falcon rocket for the NASA missions will be the Dragon capsule,
composed of three main elements: the nose cone, which protects the vessel and
the docking adaptor during ascent; the pressurized section, which houses the
crew or pressurized cargo or both; and the Service Section, which contains
avionics, the RCS system, parachutes and other support infrastructure.
SpaceX says its ISS cargo and crew transport missions will save taxpayers money
and keep high-tech jobs in the United States.
"Let's consider the default plan under way, which expects that our country
will use the Russian Soyuz at the currently negotiated price of $47 million per
seat for the period between shuttle retirement and Ares/Orion reaching [the]
space station," SpaceX declares on its Website. "Even assuming that we drop the number of U.S.
astronauts going to [the ISS] from the current 30 per year ... down to 14 per
year, the cost will be approximately $3.3 billion."









