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Cover story: The new space race
Las Vegas Mercury ^ | 1/17/02 | GEORGE KNAPP

Posted on 01/23/2002 3:23:53 PM PST by Brett66

Las Vegas Mercury: Cover story: The new space race




Engineers at Bigelow Aerospace are creating what could become the first space hotel.
Photo by DENISE TRUSCELLO


Tight security is a hallmark of Bigelow's fledgling operation in North Las Vegas.
Photo by DENISE TRUSCELLO


Who would pay $750,000 to vacation in orbit?

If a space hotel could be launched, would there be enough of a market to support it, in light of the estimated cost of a vacation in orbit? A marketing study conducted by a Japanese firm found that, even a cost of $750,000 to $1 million per ticket, there would be an "unending line" of people waiting to go up. There certainly are thousands of ultra-rich individuals who might consider it a status symbol within their social strata.

Governments that lack their own space programs might want to pay for individuals to take a ride. And corporations would want to send their employees up, in part as a perk, in part to pursue potentially lucative research projects. And as the trips became more routine, the costs eventually would come down to a more affordable level, thus opening up a whole new range of potential space tourists.

In addition to a week of first-class treatment in space, the price of the ticket would include a 10-day oriention camp before a launch. The space tourists, along with their families, would be expected to attend so they could be thouroughly prepared for the experience, physically and psychologically.

"Microgravity is going to be a strange experience," Robert Bigelow says. "We wouldn't want them to pay all that money and then spend the whole time in space throwing up."

FYI, space experts say people tend to snore less in microgravity. But they belch and fart a lot more. We thought you should be warned. --George Knapp

Thursday, January 17, 2002
Copyright © Las Vegas Mercury

Cover story: The new space race

A Las Vegas firm is dueling with NASA over commercializing space

BY GEORGE KNAPP
MERCURY

Sometime soon, perhaps by the year 2015, a line of adventurous, well-heeled tourists will form at a gangplank that leads to a resuable rocket. They will have ponied up $750,000 apiece for the privilege of enjoying amenities comparable to a first-class cruise ship, except this particular ship will spend a week traveling in a vast figure-eight trajectory around the earth and the moon.

Whle in space, some of the tourists might test their skills by firing laser guns at high-tech "skeet," or they could use more powerful instrumentation to create an unforgettable light show while passing the dark side of the moon. (Cue the Pink Floyd CD.) They probably will want to dial up the folks back home via a satellite videophone, just to rub it in. Or they may choose to zoom in on the old neighborhood through the lenses of a space telescope. More than a few of them are likely to strip off their space suits to test the outer limits of kinky sex in the miracle of microgravity. The Mile High Club will never be the same.

There are no significant scientific or technological barriers to prevent such a journey, experts say. According to one ambitous Las Vegas businessman, the only real impediments are those created by government bureaucrats.

Who is Mr. Big?

Robert Bigelow's name has never appeared on those periodic lists of the richest Nevadans, but it isn't because he lacks the ducats. According to the Wall Street Journal, the Las Vegas lodging tycoon enjoys a personal net worth in the $900 million range, which means he is far wealthier than, say, hotel bigwigs Steve Wynn and Bill Bennett.

Unlike those other guys, Bigelow has never had to release details about his fortune. His ridiculously successful Budget Suites of America chain, which has 6,500 units in Las Vegas alone (more rooms than the MGM Grand), is not a publicly traded company. Bigelow owns the whole shebang--every couch, hideaway bed and kitchenette. He not only owns them--another of his companies built them.

Biglow reluctantly spilled the beans about his net worth because he wanted to gain credibility within the aerospace community for his seemingly far-fetched plan to build the first hotel in space. He has committed a staggering $500 million to the project. Yet he knows that even if his scientific team succeeds in designing a revolutionary type of space habitat, he may never get a chance to launch it into the wild blue yonder.

"You could get far better odds at any craps table in Las Vegas," he concedes. "If this was a publicly traded company, there is no way I could get away with gambling half a billion dollars on something that is a longshot to ever break even."

There have been previous news items about Bigelow's sky-high gambit, but for the most part those other accounts have focused primarily on the novelty of vacations in space. In reality, the full scope of his proposal is far more significant and may hold the key to the ultimate exploration and commercialization of space.

"The idea of a hotel in space is sexy," Bigelow says. "It grabs people's attention and gets them thinking. But really, it's only a starting point, a small part of what we hope to achieve."

Warp Drive and

Skywalker Way

The dream has progressed far beyond the blueprint stage. A 50-acre chunk of land in North Las Vegas offers proof positive. Bigelow's "space campus" is enclosed by a tall and imposing wrought-iron fence. A second, interior fence topped with razor wire shadows the first. And a disciplined team of camouflage-clad security personnel--all ex-military--patrols the site round-the-clock. It's as if Area 51 had been moved to Cheyenne Avenue.

A cavernous hangar-like building is already in place, all 40,000 square feet of it, built by Bigelow's construction crew. It sits about 100 yards from the intersection of the aptly named Warp Drive and Skywalker Way, street names that won't appear on any North Las Vegas map. Four other equally massive structures will be going up soon. And another 80,000-square-foot behemoth will be built underground. Huge earthmovers have already gouged the requisite hole. It is there, in the security of a buried enclave, that Bigelow will test and store his ultimate creation.

Initially, Bigelow wanted to invest in the production of launch vehicles that would carry people and equipment into space. But he quickly realized there were already too many other firms competing for that very limited market. Instead, his millions are being used to create a sturdy, inexpensive space habitat, a module that would serve as the central building block for future space stations, space labs and space hotels. More than 40 world-class scientists, engineers and technicians are already on the payroll. Their goal is the design and production of living quarters that would dramatically alter the the cost of exploiting the true potential of space.

"NASA figured it would spend about a billion dollars to build its module. If it costs me half a billion to do the same, then I've failed completely," Bigelow says. "I can't be satisfied with cutting the cost in half. We are looking for a complete breathrough, a way to change the whole equation of going into space. Hopefully, one of our modules can be built for $50 million."

Cashing in on space

Two things (other than the government) have thus far prevented private interests from commercializing space: the high cost of getting there and the difficulty of staying there. If Bigelow's module can radically affect half of that problem, the other part might take care of itself. And if that happens, the potential benefits from having a permanent presence in space are mind-boggling.

Just in the area of materials science, the potential of manufacturing new materials in space could transform the world economy. Simply put, materials can be created in the microgravity of space that cannot be manufactured on Earth. An example is zeolite crystals. These rock-hard but spongelike crystals are vital to the production of gasoline, but their production on Earth is limited. In space, much larger zeolites can be grown. This could not only mean the production of more gasoline per barrel of oil, but could lead to breakthroughs in the use of clean, plentiful hydrogen as the ultmate fuel of the future.

An optical fiber known as ZBLAN has the potential to carry 100 times more data than today's silica-based fiber optics. This too carries great implications, not only for data and power transmission, but for lasers and medical technologies.

It is in the area of medicine that space's greatest potential may lie. The crystals that can be grown only in space can radically improve X-ray analysis. They have already led to the development of treatments that are being tested in clinical trials and could result in breakthroughs in dealing with several types of cancer, AIDS and arthritis. According to NASA, such reasearch has the potential to greatly improve the lives of more than a billion people who suffer with these and other diseases. To realize the potential, though, people need to be able to stay in space for extended periods.

"If we can get the cost down and allow governments or companies to own or lease their own space stations, there is no telling where it could lead," Bigelow says. "The cures for cancer or muscular dystrophy could be there, waiting for us to find them. We could manufacture glass that would be stronger than titanium. In entertainment, we could create location settings that every movie studio, every TV network would want. We have only a tiny sniff of what might be possible to accomplish in microgravity."

A 22,000 mph bullet

In a nondescript office building just west of the Las Vegas Strip are models and computer renderings of Bigelow's module. What he is building is a cousin to NASA's now-defunct TransHab program. At one point, NASA asked Bigelow Aerospace to serve as the centerpoint of a high-powered consortium, one that included industrial giants Boeing and Mitsubishi, in designing a new habitation module. But Boeing and Mitsubishi wouldn't carry on unless they received government money, or at least some sort of guarantee. When NASA wouldn''t give them either, they dropped out, and Bigelow decided to go it alone, using his own money.

As designed, Bigelow's module could be stored in the cargo hold of a reusable rocket or space shuttle. Once in orbit, it would be inflated to its full size. The interior would contain 2 1/2 times the living space of NASA's planned (but canceled) billion-dollar module, which means just two or three modules would be far roomier and considerably cheaper than what has been installed as part of the much-troubled International Space Station.

"We could have 1,200 cubic meters of habitation in space, using just seven or eight launches," Bigelow says. "It took NASA 45 launches to put 1,100 cubic meters up there."

They might be cheaper and roomier, but would they be safe? In space, even a loose paint chip, traveling at tremendous speed, can cut through a hull like a butcher knife through cheese. Bigelow's team may have an answer to that as well. Using something known as a hypervelocity gas gun, they've been firing projectiles into assorted test hulls. The projectiles are fired at speeds of up to 22,000 mph, more than three times the speed of a bullet from a deer rifle. The metal hull in use by NASA doesn't fare well under such tests. Tiny projecticles rip right through it. But Bigelow's team has developed its own hull, using a combination of high-tech fibers and metals. Their hull will not only withstand hypervelocity projectiles, but would provide better protection against space radiation.

Once his manufacturing plant is ready to go, Bigelow figures he can have a finished module, ready for launch, by the summer of 2003. But still he worries it will never get off the ground. The impediment can b summed up in four initials: NASA.

NASA: No Access to

Space for Americans

Millions of Americans still think fondly of NASA. We remember The Right Stuff era, the dashing astronauts who captured our hearts and kindled our imaginations, and the moon missions that signaled America's victory in the space race over the hated Russians. Those heady times are long gone. We haven't been back to the moon in 30 years. NASA's record in sending probes to Mars is a sad joke. NASA's contribution to the International Space Station (ISS) is billions of dollars over budget, and yet the ISS is still more of a halfhearted dream than a fully functioning outpost. NASA is a mess.

"NASA should stand for No Access to Space for Americans," according to Bigelow. "They own everything, the structures, the launch vehicles. And they patent everything so that no one else can use any of it without NASA's permission, which they rarely give. NASA is a jealous guardian of access to space. Look at the fit they threw about Dennis Tito paying the Russians $20 million to take a ride on Soyuz. We almost need to dissolve the whole agency and start over."

Bigelow is far from alone in his criticism of NASA. Basically, every other private entity that has dared to dream of a commercial operation in space has concluded that NASA seems unwilling to surrender its monopoly on the solar system.

Like Bigelow, another wealthy businessman named Andrew Beal dreamed of getting a jump on space exploration. Beal invested millions in his plan to build a large, low-cost, reusable launch vehicle that would dramatically lower the cost of getting people and stuff into space. But NASA went into competition against him. It convinced Congress to authorize $10 billion in start-up funds for a new NASA launcher. Beal folded his tent, knowing he couldn't possibly compete at that level. (A rival launcher, the VentureStar or X-33, to be built by Lockheed, has also been canceled.)

In an open letter to the aerospace community, a bitter Beal argued that the $10 billion will be wasted because there is no technological barrier that needs to be overcome. Private companies could do the same job at a fraction of the cost, but not if they have to compete directly against the government.

"Asking NASA to develop low-cost space access is like asking Amtrak to develop new low-cost locomotives or the U.S. Postal Service to develop new, low-cost electronic mail systems," Beal lamented. "NASA has tilted the field against private efforts. We should be thankful Congress never funded NASA to develop the automobile. If it had, I suspect the use of these dangerous vehicles would be restricted to highly trained 'autonauts.'"

Pat Dasch, president of the National Space Society, agrees that "NASA is not creating an environment to allow commercial business in space." Dasch says NASA still sees itself as a commercial player, which would seem contrary to the role of a government agency.

Bigelow has learned these lessons the hard way. Bigelow Aerospace made a last-ditch effort to obtain a smidgen of hope that its module would ever be allowed into space. NASA's offer was this: Although Bigelow would fund the entire project, NASA would retain control of 75 percent of the space in any of his modules. What's more, NASA declared, Bigelow would be prohibited from using his remaining 25 percent to house any humans whatsoever. Does this sound like an agency that wants to help commercialize space?

Bigelow knows he can't count on NASA to launch his projects, but what about foreign launchers such as the French or Russians? Access to those is also controlled by the U.S. government. Anything that is launched into space is now considered to be "a satellite" and is stricly controlled by the State Department, with input from NASA and the Defense Department. If NASA doesn't want you to launch, you won't launch. Exporting a "satellite" to be launched in a foreign country would be tantamount to treason.

"NASA is a prime example of a self-serving government pork barrel, and is little more than a jobs program where the agenda seems to be, `Don't make waves, keep your head down and try to spend more money than in the previous year,'" Bigelow alleges. "There are pharmaceutical companies that want to develop miracle drugs in their own space stations, but NASA will never allow it because that would take business sway from the ISS. I've told them this to their face. So have a lot of other people."

The future

Despite the obstacles, Bigelow Aerospace is plugging along and plans to be ready for the launch of its first module in about 18 months. Already it is the first company in history to petition the government for permission to put its own space station in orbit. A high-powered Washington law firm has been hired to help guide the application through the government maze, but it could take years to process the paperwork. The feds don't even have the forms written yet.

Even though the Bush administration has yet to develop even a semblance of an overall space policy (other than its desire to militarize space), there is talk in Washington of a NASA housecleaning and for sweeping changes in laws governing access to space. If that happens, Bigelow might get permission after all to mass produce his space modules, habitats that he says could also be used for deep space missions, such as a manned journey to Mars.

History could be written at that 50-acre factory in North Las Vegas, if everything falls into place. Bigelow, who is better known for his weekly rental units and his oft-publicized interest in UFOs and the paranormal, could have his name mentioned in the same breath with some of space pioneers of the past. Bigelow hinted that he might want to book his own space vacation.

"I've thought a lot about going up there myself, and I can't wait," he confides. "But don't tell my wife."



TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: space
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NASA should stand for No Access to Space for Americans
1 posted on 01/23/2002 3:23:53 PM PST by Brett66
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To: space
indexing
2 posted on 01/23/2002 3:24:17 PM PST by Brett66
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To: RightWhale;anymouse;RadioAstronomer;NonZeroSum;jimkress;discostu; The_Victor;Centurion2000...
Ping.
3 posted on 01/23/2002 3:29:27 PM PST by Brett66
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To: Brett66
"NASA figured it would spend about a billion dollars to build its module. If it costs me half a billion to do the same, then I've failed completely," Bigelow says. "I can't be satisfied with cutting the cost in half. We are looking for a complete breathrough, a way to change the whole equation of going into space. Hopefully, one of our modules can be built for $50 million."

This is because Bigelow earned his money. NASA didn't.

4 posted on 01/23/2002 3:32:43 PM PST by NC_Libertarian
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To: Brett66
Well, this should be interesting.

Sy, does anyone know whatever happened to the Roton?

5 posted on 01/23/2002 3:36:07 PM PST by El Sordo
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To: Brett66
Bigelow has been real quiet about his space hotel since he announced the plan a few years ago on the Art Bell show. He will have competition, from some Japanese in particular, and they have deeper pockets. It didn't seem at the time that Bigelow had the capital on his own to pull it off, and he wasn't accepting outside investment.
6 posted on 01/23/2002 3:40:59 PM PST by RightWhale
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To: Brett66
....5....4....3....2....1....Bump.
7 posted on 01/23/2002 3:42:39 PM PST by DoctorMichael
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To: El Sordo
< cartman > Kick ass. < /cartman >

Rotary Rocket went belly-up last year. The tech was good -- but they ran out of cash. Roton mastermind Gary C. Hudson is still alive and well, however, and who knows what he'll come up with next time?

8 posted on 01/23/2002 3:45:15 PM PST by B-Chan
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To: B-Chan
It's too bad about the ROTON, I liked the concept. Maybe at a future date this idea will get off the launch pad.
9 posted on 01/23/2002 4:01:30 PM PST by Brett66
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To: Brett66
NASA is profoundly unAmerican and should be totally dimantled. A new limited space agency concerned with defense and only defense should be created. Everything else should be opened to enterprising free men.
10 posted on 01/23/2002 4:05:33 PM PST by NC_Libertarian
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To: Brett66
Yeah privatizing space. Message to NASA: put up or shut up, and don't tell us space is "dangerous" we knew that already.
11 posted on 01/23/2002 4:08:21 PM PST by discostu
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To: NC_Libertarian
If men like Bigelow succeed, then NASA can be made irrelevant. This could lead to their demise, but those senators are addicted to NASA's pork like crack cocaine.
12 posted on 01/23/2002 4:21:33 PM PST by Brett66
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To: El Sordo; OLDWORD
In answer to your question, Dick Roton is the "test pilot" of a privately financed, reuseable launch vehicle. That project is also located in the Las Vegas area. A test launch of a small-scale prototype was reported in an article about a month ago.

This is one of those subjects which is entirely feasible from a technical standpoint. All it takes is the wilolingness and the wherewithall to do it. This man seems to have both.

Congressman Billybob

Phil & Billybob in the mornings.

13 posted on 01/23/2002 4:35:32 PM PST by Congressman Billybob
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To: Brett66
Anyone who is interested in this subject should read "Kings of the High Frontier" by Victor Koman. It is very well written and was one of the first books that was published in cyberspace before it was published in paper. There are still a few copies out there, I'd check ABEBOOKS and Amazon to find one. I believe it won the science fiction Prometheus Award *Before being published on paper*!

I have no financial interest in Kings of the High Frontier, but it is a great book!

14 posted on 01/23/2002 4:36:52 PM PST by marktwain
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To: Brett66
Viva Los Vegas.
15 posted on 01/23/2002 4:41:51 PM PST by dr_who
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To: Congressman Billybob

XCOR

Dick Rutan is the test pilot for XCOR. His brother, Burt Rutan, is the team leader at scaled composites- an X-Prize contender.

16 posted on 01/23/2002 5:10:13 PM PST by Brett66
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To: Brett66
Looks like "Superchicken"'s eggcopter. :)

Seriously, I know the guys building and financing XCOR's rocketplane. Sharp guys, but I'm still skeptical about the value of this particular contraption. Not that it won't lead to better products down the road.

17 posted on 01/23/2002 10:10:37 PM PST by anymouse
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Comment #18 Removed by Moderator

To: abwehr
Allow underfunded underengineered free lancers to dump their stuff in orbit and soon space would become useless. You aren't thinking clearly. Your argument is nonsense. We already are in the situation that you describe, and space is far from useless. The only difference is that any "underfunded and underengineered" stuff that goes up now is from some third world government like India or China. Remember that space is a lot larger than earth. There is no one in overall charge of the Oceans, which are a lot smaller and only a two dimensional surface for 99.99% of the traffic on them, yet the oceans have not become "unusable".

Let space junk accumulate to where it is a real problem, and I predict some private space junk dealer will make a fortune. That mass cost a fortune to put in obit, and so it is potentially worth a lot up there.

19 posted on 01/24/2002 3:19:13 AM PST by marktwain
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To: B-Chan
Don't know if you saw this yet?

There is a space bump list that you can seach on too.

20 posted on 01/24/2002 7:31:06 AM PST by anymouse
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