Bigelow to test habitat prototype in desert near Las Vegas
Desert dwellers near Las Vegas will receive an unusual addition to the population at some point next year: a habitat built by Bigelow Aerospace. Public details are still few, except for these: it is called The Guide, it's described as a "flight-like" test article that is somewhat smaller than an automobile, and it will be placed in a dry lake near Alamo sometime in the spring or summer of 2014. Read more
Boeing is building its Crew Space Transportation (CST)-100 space capsule to take humans into orbit. As reported by Sen, the recent drop tests of Boeing's CST-100 were carried out with help from another commercial space business, Bigelow Aerospace. Bigelow Aerospace plans to use the CST-100 to ferry customers to and from its planned Bigelow Orbiting Space Complex, an inflatable space station. Read more
SpaceX and Bigelow Aerospace Join Forces to Offer Crewed Missions to Private Space Stations
Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX) and Bigelow Aerospace (BA) have agreed to conduct a joint marketing effort focused on international customers. The two companies will offer rides on SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft, using the Falcon launch vehicle to carry passengers to Bigelow habitats orbiting the Earth.
"We're very excited to be working with our colleagues at SpaceX to present the unique services that our two companies can offer to international clientele. We're eager to join them overseas to discuss the substantial benefits that BA 330 leasing can offer in combination with SpaceX transportation capabilities" - Robert T. Bigelow, Bigelow Aerospace's President and Founder.
At the Bigelow Aerospace factory here, the full-size space station mockups sitting on the warehouse floor look somewhat like puffy white watermelons. The interiors offer a hint of what spacious living in space might look like. Read more
Buoyed by success, Bigelow Aerospace is expediting its schedule for launching an orbital habitat as early as 2010, but it's not clear whether affordable space transportation will be available by that time.
A space holiday is as futuristic a holiday as can be imagined, until that is, one of the worlds trillionnaires decides to delve deep into the earths core for, what else, a grounded leisure experience. For the time being, the worlds rich are headed up, up and away. By 2012, Robert Bigelow, the man behind the first hotel in the Milky Way, hopes to float (if youll pardon the pun) a four-week stay in space at about $ 15 million. Add to that about $ 20 million a ticket via the Russian Space Agency to get there and no prizes for guessing whether this will be billed as a luxury trip. Interestingly, flights are already booked until 2009 for short individual sojourns. For those who dont know their Mars from their Mercury, Santosh George Kulangara from Kerala is going to be the first Indian space tourist.
An inflatable shell for satellites that would allow people to enter and make repairs has been patented. The patent description also points out that radar stealth technology could be built into the shell, suggesting possible military applications.
The patent was awarded to Bigelow Aerospace in November 2005. The company is based in Las Vegas, Nevada, US, and is best known for its plans to build orbiting hotels for space tourists. It launched a one-third scale prototype called Genesis I in July, which is still in orbit
The shell would also block the view of any overly curious satellites nearby, by shielding most of the satellite's working parts.
"There would not be any visible way to determine the type of equipment housed in the craft" the patent notes.
The colour of the shell could also be chosen to make the whole structure difficult to spot. These characteristics seem to have been chosen to attract interest and development funds from the US military.
"This hits on two of the buzz areas that I know DARPA and the Department of Defense have been looking at. The DoD has talked about modular satellites, where you can go in and do maintenance" - Dan King, a former US air force engineer who now heads King Space Research in Albuquerque, New Mexico, US.
Instead of sending up a new satellite, an old one could be refurbished to improve its capabilities. The US military has also expressed an interest in ways to hide satellites from enemies.
"It's intriguing but it hasn't proven out yet. I could give you tons of projects where people spent millions or billions of dollars but it never went anywhere" - Dan King.
No one at Bigelow Aerospace authorised to discuss the satellite patent was available for comment.
Bigelow Aerospace is now offering to the public an exciting new opportunity. For the first time, you can actually send an item of your own into space. Your personal selection will be floating inside a spacecraft hundreds of miles above the Earth. If all systems function properly, your personal treasure (be it a photo, ring, laser blaster or multi launch weapons platform) will be floating in space for years.