SpaceX inks lease with Spaceport America, will push reusable rocket higher

SpaceX inks lease with Spaceport America, will push Grasshopper rocket even higher

Sir Richard Branson and his Virgin Galactic crew will soon have a new neighbor at Spaceport America, as SpaceX has just signed a three-year lease to the facility. Central to the agreement, SpaceX will move its Grasshopper reusable rocket test program from McGregor, Texas to the southern New Mexico desert, where it aims to push Grasshopper higher than before. According to SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell, the move was due to New Mexico’s favorable regulatory situation, along with the physical landscape of the Spaceport America site. As fun as that sounds, though, we’d like to imagine that the opportunity to rub shoulders with other celebs in the commercial space industry clinched the decision.

[Photo credit: Spaceport America / Flickr]

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SpaceX’s Grasshopper VTOL rocket triples its previous best with 840-foot hop (video)

SpaceX's Grasshopper hops to 840 feet, triples its previous height record video

If it were in Aesop’s fable, SpaceX‘s Grasshopper would probably be the ant instead, as the reusable rocket’s team haven’t stopped working since the 10-story craft launched back in September. It just tripled its previous altitude mark of 263 feet by soaring to 840 feet, hovering a tick, then gently landing on the exact spot it took off, all while making it look easy. Head after the jump for a video of the whole affair, which was captured rather dramatically by the company’s hexacopter.

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Source: SpaceX (YouTube)

Watch live: Orbital Sciences’ Antares rocket to lift off on test flight (update: success!)

Watch live Orbital Sciences' Antares rocket to lift off on test flight update success!

SpaceX may be the only private outfit currently shepherding cargo to the International Space Station, but Orbital Sciences, which is the second party in NASA’s Commercial Orbital Transportation Services effort, is taking a step towards its own ISS resupply missions. Today, the firm’s Antares rocket will undergo its very first test flight, taking off from the space agency’s Wallops Flight Facility on Wallops Island, Virginia. Liftoff is slated for sometime between 5PM and 7PM, with an 80 percent chance of favorable weather, as opposed to the 45 percent odds and high-altitude winds that foiled its initial attempt yesterday. To watch Antares embark on its maiden voyage, hit the jump for a live video feed.

Update: Antares blasted off at a hair past 5PM and successfully separated from its mock payload. The live stream has wrapped up, but we’ll slot in a video of the launch as soon as we get ahold of one.

Update 2: NASA just posted its footage of the rocket taking off, and we’ve placed the video after the break for your viewing pleasure.

[Image credit: NASA, Flickr]

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Source: NASA (1), (2), Orbital Sciences

SpaceX’s Merlin 1D engine gets flight qualified, Musk expects launch this year (update)

SpaceX's Merlin 1D engine gets flight qualified, Musk says it will fly this year

It’s been quite the eventful year for the team at SpaceX. A few weeks after sending a Dragon capsule to the International Space Station, Elon Musk’s company announced that its Merlin 1D engine managed to snag flight qualification, thanks to 1,970 seconds of testing time at its McGregor, Texas facility. That adds up to more than 10 full mission durations. The engine scored a ratio of 4:1 for critical engine life parameters, well above the industry’s 2:1 standard. SpaceX will waste little time in getting it off the ground — Musk said the engine will be taking off this year, as part of a Falcon 9 flight.

Update: Now with more video.

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Source: SpaceX

Jeff Bezos highlights finds from F-1 engine underwater ‘sculpture garden’

You’d think running a company like Amazon would keep a guy busy. But like many of his fellow billionaires, Jeff Bezos still has big dreams. Space dreams. As of late, the exec’s been spending time onboard the Seabed Worker (much of which has apparently involved working on his computer from the cabin), alongside a crew tasked with recovering F-1 engines from the Apollo program, which are now a part of an “incredible sculpture garden…that tells the story of a fiery and violent end.” Seems Bezos has been exercising his poesy muscles in the cabin, as well. The team has apparently recovered enough F1-parts to construct two engines, which will go on display to help “inspire something amazing.” More striking images from the expedition can be seen in the source link below.

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Source: Bezos Expeditions

DIYRockets starts a challenge to build open source, 3D-printed rocket engines

DIYRockets and Sunglass start a challenge to make open source, 3Dprinted rocket engines

DIYRockets believes that our chances of advancing space exploration improve when everyone can lend a hand. The company is putting its money where its mouth is by launching a competition to develop 3D-printed rocket motors using Sunglass’ cloud design platform. Teams who sign up have to build an engine that could boost a nanosatellite-level payload into low Earth orbit using 3D-printed steel and other safe materials. The only major stipulations are that creators present a good business case and open-source their creations to help out other builders. DIYRockets’ prize strategy reflects its for-the-greater-good ambitions: there’s a $5,000 award for the best motor, but there are separate $2,500 prizes for both a student creation and the design that contributes the most to the industry. Registration officially starts on March 9th, and runs until April 6th, with the finished models due on June 1st. We’ll be closer to a crowdsourced vision of space when the winners are revealed by July 1st.

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Source: DIYRockets

NASA: SpaceX Dragon capsule to reach ISS on March 3rd at 6:01AM ET

Didn’t get enough of the Dragon capsule launch this week? Good news, because after a day’s delay due to (now remedied, according to NASA and SpaceX) faults with three clusters of its Draco thrusters, the capsule is set to be grappled by the International Space Station at 6:31AM ET on March 3rd (tomorrow morning). If you’ll recall, the mission is mainly aimed at getting refreshed supplies and some experiments up to the space station. As an aside, NASA also notes that Dragon is still set to arrive back on earth for a splashdown on the 25th, as initially planned. If you’re up for it, NASA TV coverage starts at 3:30AM the same day and the final berthing process (actually getting the capsule connected to the ISS) should happen after 8AM — all that said, initial “orbital maneuvers” are set for 2AM, according to a tweet from Elon Musk. For more details on this stage of the mission, including those involved, blast over to the NASA source link below — and make sure you’ve got enough coffee ready.

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Via: The Verge

Source: NASA, SpaceX (Twitter), Elon Musk (Twitter)

South Korea successfully launches native rocket and satellite into space

South Korea launches first native rocket and satellite into space

The spacefaring club has been a small one: to date, just 10 countries have managed to build their own rocket and successfully deploy at least a satellite. Make that 11. South Korea has entered the fold by successfully launching its mostly self-developed, two-stage Naro rocket and putting the vehicle’s Science and Technology Satellite-2C payload into orbit. The achievement comes after two prominent failures in 2009 and 2010, and is partly symbolic when there’s no plans for a short-term follow-up. However, the success gets the ball rolling for the long run — the Korea Aerospace Research Institute is working with contractors to build completely in-house rocket stages by 2016, and reach 300 tons of thrust as soon as 2018.

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Via: Space.com

Source: Yonhap News Agency

NASA rocket to paint the sky red, tune in tonight starting at 4:30PM ET (video)

NASA rocket to paint the sky red, tune in tonight starting at 430PM ET video

Decades ago, NASA would frequently light up the night sky with chemical trails as part of its measurements of upper atmosphere behavior. While those moments are increasingly rare, we’ll get a rare chance to enjoy one of them this evening. The agency’s Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia is launching a suborbital rocket that will generate (and test) a pair of trails of red-tinted lithium as it flies above Eastern US coastline — trails bright enough that large parts of the seaboard may get a first-hand look as the rocket gains altitude. If you fall outside of that range, don’t fret. NASA will stream the whole affair starting from 4:30PM Eastern, with a hoped-for takeoff over an hour later. Catch the feed below when the launch is live, and hit the source links for more about the mission itself.

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Via: Space.com

Source: NASA

Watch SpaceX’s Grasshopper rocket hover, from its own point of view (video)

Watch SpaceX's Grasshopper reusable rocket hover, from its own point of view video

Ever wonder what it would be like to hover 131 feet above the ground through rocket power? You could come close with a jetpack, or you could watch a new SpaceX video that shows the Grasshopper reusable rocket’s own perspective. The new angle on a December test flight emphasizes just how quick and precise the hover routine has become: it takes little time for the Grasshopper to stop at its intended altitude, and the rocket doesn’t bob or sway to any significant degree. We’d most like to see the rocket reach its full two-mile potential, but we’ll gladly be distracted by the recent footage found after the break.

Continue reading Watch SpaceX’s Grasshopper rocket hover, from its own point of view (video)

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