Jul 062018
 

For anyone with the usual (for readers of this blog, I imagine) level of knowledge of the O’Neill colony concept, this video does not provide much in the way of new technical info. It is, however, of some historical interest, showing the beginnings of public interest in the concept, from 1975.

 

Sigh. in 1975, O’Neill thought it reasonable to assume that the Model 1 colony, with a population of 10,000, could be built with an Apollo program level of effort by the late 1980’s, and had originally assumed that a Model 4 could be up and running by the late 2020’s… population in the hundreds of thousands to millions.

 

Sigh.

 Posted by at 5:27 pm
Jun 302018
 

In just under the wire for June, 2018 are the rewards for APR Patreon patrons. Included this month:

  • A sizable January, 1945 technical description of the YP-80 “Shooting Star” by Lockheed. 300 or so pages, filled with illustrations of the aircraft and components.
  • “On The Utility of the Moon in Space Transportation: the Lunatron Concept.” A 1963 NASA concept for using an electromagnetic accelerator to hurl payloads from the lunar surface onto high energy trajectories, up to solar system escape.
  • A scan of a large-format Sikorsky lithograph of an ABC (advancing blade concept) VTOL airliner (basically a 727 fuselage turned into a high-speed helicopter).
  • An all-new CAD diagram of the Soviet Chelomei LKS spaceplane with an inboard profile showing the military (nuclear bombardment) payload. The first in a series on the LKS.

If you are interested in helping to preserve (and get copies of) this sort of thing, consider signing up for the APR Patreon.

 

patreon-200

 

 Posted by at 11:39 am
Jun 222018
 

Air Force certifies Falcon Heavy, orders satellite launch for 2020

A $130 million contract to launch the Air Force Space Command-52 satellite.That’s more than the Falcon 9 Heavy is normally supposed to cost, but the extra is due to government assurance requirements. Even with the price increase, it’s still one-third to one-half the price of a Delta IV heavy.

The falcon 9 Heavy already has flights lined up for the near future…the STP-2flight with a bunch of mini-payloads for November 2018, Arabsat in December. Inmarsat and Viasat hd prior launches scheduled with SpaceX but moved to Ariane V due to delays, but kept their agreements with SpaceX and may lunch with them in the future.

 Posted by at 3:55 am
Jun 202018
 

First draft of diagrams for the next issue of US Launcher Projects. This will include concepts such as an eight-F-1 Nova, a 1962 Lockheed fully reusable spaceplane launcher, a Boeing HTOHL SSTO, a Convair VTOHL Delta Clipper competitor, a giant SPS launcher, a balloon-recovered Saturn I, an early Space Shuttle concept and an expendable SSTO.

 Posted by at 8:02 pm
Jun 192018
 

The first Aerojet-Rocketdyne AR-22 rocket engine has recently been assembled. This is a somewhat modified version of the old Space Shuttle Main Engine, meant specifically to power the first stage of the Boeing “Phantom Express” spaceplane. Thrust is 375,000 pounds and the engine is meant to be used 55 times, with servicing every 10 missions.

First Engine Assembled for DARPA and Boeing Reusable Experimental Spaceplane

The Phantom Express is meant to fly often and inexpensively… and appears to be basically an updated version of the mid-90’s Rockwell design for the X-33. It’s not clear to me that a hydrogen-burner using SSME-derived tech can compete economically with the likes of the Falcon 9, but the Phantom Express isn’t really intended to compete in the commercial market. Instead, the Phantom Express is intended as military launch system, lobbing relatively small satellites – communications and recon, with the possibility of GPS-replacements in the event that military action takes them out. Given that any future war with a major opponent will certainly involve attacks on American space infrastructure, it’s reasonable for DARPA to want to have as many rapid response launch systems as practical. The basic concept underlying the Phantom Express is simple and straightforward enough, and likely to be somewhat more rugged and reliable than the hoverslam landing system of the Falcon series… at the cost of probably weighing more.

 Posted by at 8:00 pm
Jun 192018
 

An interesting and at times a bit depressing article on the current state of funding and planning for next-gen space telescopes… and how we’re probably not going to get what we should really want.

NASA’s Next Flagship Mission May Be A Crushing Disappointment For Astrophysics

Plus, this:

NASA funding is at the lowest rate as a percentage of the Federal budget – 0.4% – since 1958. Back when we could barely put a ham sammich into orbit.

 Posted by at 1:53 pm
Jun 182018
 

Trump Directs Pentagon to Create ‘Space Force’ Branch of Military

“The essence of the American character is to explore new horizons and to tame new frontiers.”

Well… yes.

… his directive will task the Defense Department to begin the process of establishing the ‘Space Force’ as the sixth branch of the U.S. armed forces. He said the new branch’s creation will be overseen by Gen. Joseph Dunford, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

“We are going to have the Air Force and we are going to have the Space Force, separate but equal.”

Unfortunate phraseology, but damned straight.

As expected, this will be met with derision and snark. But that’s ok… so long as it actually happens. Because a USSF is about 50 years overdue.

To see some snark:

C’mon man, ‘Space Marines’ was RIGHT THERE

“It’s amazing that we have a President that bangs porn stars and wants a space force and I still hate him. ”

The 80’s aesthetic actually really works here.

 

 Posted by at 1:19 pm
Jun 102018
 

A Boeing illustration from 1964 showing a number of designs for lifting entry vehicles that Boeing had produced by that point. Most of these are manned vehicle concepts; a few of them are unfamiliar to me. The “B-3 —– B” looks like it might have been an ASSET competitor. The “Recoverable Booster” at top is one of several similar V-shaped designs that used a modestly modified Dyna Soar as the crew capsule up front. One such design was the Model 895 shown (along with competing ASP designs from other firms) in Aerospace Projects Review issue V2N5.

 

 Posted by at 12:19 am