Nelson Mail

Crowds again on Florida’s space coast

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Privateers such as Elon Musk and Sir Richard Branson have brought some much-needed pizzazz back to space exploratio­n.

UNITED STATES: The crowds were back. Lining the beaches and the causeways, their binoculars fixed on the same launch pad that first sent men to the Moon.

But this time the draw wasn’t the Nasa heroes of the 1960s Space Age – Alan Shepard, John Glenn, Neil Armstrong – who paved a path to the lunar surface. Instead, it was a puckish and eccentric billionair­e with a big new rocket and a penchant for showmanshi­p.

The launch of Elon Musk’s Falcon Heavy from the Kennedy Space Centre on Wednesday was the latest in a series of milestones that has revived interest in space, and the sacrosanct stretch of sand along the Florida coast that has witnessed so many epic flights out of the atmosphere. The hotels were full, the press room overflowin­g, and the traffic near the space centre was bumper to bumper.

Musk’s triumph in a test flight that sent a sports car deep into space may have been something of a cross-promotiona­l stunt involving Tesla, one of this other companies. But it also marked a turning point for a budding commercial space industry that has raised the stakes for itself by promising big things.

Now the question is whether it can maintain its momentum and live up to the promise of returning humans to space, while landing spacecraft on the surface of the Moon – inherently difficult and dangerous endeavours, even for Nasa.

SpaceX’s launch comes as the Trump administra­tion is looking to restructur­e the role of Nasa, ensuring that private enterprise and internatio­nal partners work closely with the US space agency.

Later this month, VicePresid­ent Mike Pence and the rest of the National Space Council will hold their second meeting, this time at the Kennedy Space Centre, to discuss the role that companies such as SpaceX could play in the country’s ambitions to return to the Moon and explore the cosmos.

As the council, which was reconstitu­ted under Trump, convenes, one major question it will have to grapple with is, ‘‘How can we best spend our resources as a nation to ensure the most robust space portfolio we can?’’, said Phil Larson, an assistant dean at the University of Colorado at Boulder and a former spokespers­on for SpaceX.

Lori Garver, a former deputy Nasa administra­tor who pushed for a greater reliance on the commercial sector during the Obama administra­tion, said the launch of Falcon Heavy should spark a change in the way Nasa operates.

‘‘This much-delayed, muchmalign­ed rocket is just what the space agency needs to escape from the government­al bureaucrac­y that has bound her to low Earth orbit for the past 45 years,’’ she said.

‘‘Unfortunat­ely, the traditiona­lists at Nasa don’t share this view and have feared this moment since the day the programme was announced seven years ago.’’

The Falcon Heavy launch was a milestone not just because it became the most powerful rocket in operation, but because it boosted its payload, a Tesla Roadster electric car, out of Earth’s orbit on a trajectory around the Sun that Musk said would take it out further than Mars.

SpaceX fitted the vehicle with three cameras that beamed back stunning images of the ruby red car soaring through the blackness of space, with Earth a blue orb in the distance.

As impressive as the launch was, SpaceX still faces a far greater test: flying astronauts. For all the hype and hoopla surroundin­g the launch of a US$200,000 sports car with a space-suited mannequin named ‘‘Starman’’ at the wheel, SpaceX has never flown a rocket with a human on board.

While the industry has had a series of triumphs, ‘‘that doesn’t mean it’s going to be easy’’, said Michael Lopez-Alegria, a former Nasa astronaut who also served as president of the Commercial Spacefligh­t Federation. ‘‘Taking humans to space should never be taken for granted.’’

Along with Boeing, SpaceX is under contract from Nasa to deliver astronauts to the Internatio­nal Space Station. Though there have been a series of setbacks and delays, both companies say the first flights with humans could be this year.

Virgin Galactic, the space company founded by Sir Richard Branson, and Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin also could fly humans for the first time this year, on suborbital jaunts that could reach the edge of space.

As the space council mulls how best to involve commercial companies in its plans, its exploits so far have begun to attract attention on the Florida space coast, reviving an area that was hit hard when the Space Shuttle was retired in 2011.

For about a decade, SpaceX has been a presence there, including making use of pad 39A, scene of some of the crucial Apollo and Space Shuttle missions. More recently, Blue Origin has been refurbishi­ng a historic launch pad there, and has recently built a massive manufactur­ing facility where it plans to build its nextgenera­tion rocket, New Glenn.

One Web, which plans to put up constellat­ions of thousands of satellites to beam the internet to remote corners of the world, is building a manufactur­ing site of its own nearby.

Boeing has taken over an old Space Shuttle facility at the Kennedy Space Centre and is making improvemen­ts to a Cape Canaveral Air Force Station launch site in preparatio­n for the first flights of Nasa astronauts from American soil since the shuttle missions ended.

The shuttle landing strip could be used by Virgin Orbit to launch small satellites.

And then there’s Moon Express, the first commercial entity to receive permission from the US Federal Aviation Administra­tion to fly out of Earth’s orbit to deep space. It plans to fly a robotic lander to the surface of the Moon.

In some ways, Moon Express is already moving ahead under a new model, in which it partners with government agencies to achieve a first for a private company: landing a rover on the Moon.

‘‘The challenges of space are immense, and the risks are huge,’’ said Bob Richards, the founder and chief executive of Moon Express. ‘‘But the innovation­s, conviction­s and entreprene­urial drive of the commercial space sector, in partnershi­p with government, will achieve new economics and permanence for the expansion of Earth’s social and economic sphere to the Moon and beyond.’’

– Washington Post

 ?? PHOTO: AP ??
PHOTO: AP
 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: MOON EXPRESS ?? An artist’s concept of Moon Express’s lander on the lunar surface. The company intends partnering with US government agencies to become the first private company to put a lander on the Moon.
ILLUSTRATI­ON: MOON EXPRESS An artist’s concept of Moon Express’s lander on the lunar surface. The company intends partnering with US government agencies to become the first private company to put a lander on the Moon.
 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? Sir Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic company aims to start flights this year to the edge of space.
PHOTO: AP Sir Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic company aims to start flights this year to the edge of space.
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