Dec. 2, 2008 -- It has been more than 10 years since Rick Searfoss, a retired Air Force colonel, test pilot and NASA shuttle commander has been in space, but that is about to change. His new gig should put him beyond the atmosphere as often as four times a day -- and maybe put you in the cockpit right next to him. Searfoss is the senior (and so far only) test pilot for XCOR Aerospace, a California startup that started selling tickets today for suborbital trips to space for $95,000 per ride. That's about half the cost of what another commercial space venture, Virgin Galactic, is charging for future trips to space. At XCOR Aerospace's bargain price, it won't be a glam-trip, like what competitor Virgin Galactic has in mind. XCOR's Lynx is a two-seater. Searfoss gets the left side, the one with the controls. A passenger will sit to his right. "When people first look at this they say, 'How are you going to make any money?'" XCOR's Douglas Graham told Discovery News. The concept is quite simple: You gas up and go. Related Content: 'What a Great Ride,' Says Space Tourist After Landing Irene Klotz's blog: Free Space How Stuff Works: Space Tourism Graham said the company plans to be able to turnaround and fly its kerosene-and-liquid oxygen-fueled vessel four times a day. Lynx, which takes off and lands like an airplane, doesn't need a launch pad or a tow into the air to get going. "As long as you have good airspace and a 10,000-foot runway, you can fly them anywhere," Graham said. Test flights are scheduled to begin in 2010 and if all goes well commercial service could start a year later. "A lot of people are pretty good at promising stuff in this business and they don't deliver," Graham said. "We want to under-promise and over-deliver." The XCOR experience will be very different than what is planned for passengers aboard Virgin Galactic's suborbital ship, which is based on the prize-winner SpaceShipOne, the world's first commercially built manned spaceship. Aircraft designer Burt Rutan and his company Scaled Composites built SpaceShipOne to win a $10-million contest for private spaceflight in 2004. For SpaceShipTwo, the company is thinking bigger and more luxurious service: Seats for seven, not one; room to float; no spacesuits needed. XCOR's passengers, meanwhile, will wear pressurized garments, fly only with a pilot and be strapped down for the entire ride. It won't last as long or go as high. XCOR's strongest selling point is the view. "You take off quickly, climb up at a 65 or 75 degree angle. After about two minutes, the sky starts to turn colors, then black. You have another minute of (engine) burn, then you coast to the apogee of your path. You'll feel a minute or so of weightlessness, then the pilot will flip the plane over and you'll see Earth's horizon and the atmosphere below," Graham said. More NewsMouse Cloned From Long-Frozen CellResearchers create a mouse from a long-frozen cell. Will the mammoth be next?'Bubble' Could Protect AstronautsScientists say a "bubble" around a Mars-bound spaceship could protect astronauts.Big Reduction of Snowmobiles in Yellowstone ProposedA new plan would cut snowmobile use by 40 percent in Yellowstone.Microbes: Fuel of the Future?A reddish South American microbe is literally breathing fuel, say scientists.DNA Links Remains to Steve FossetDNA tests on two bones found in California confirm they are those of Steve Fossett.Women Carry More Bacteria Than MenSome bacteria prefer women, suggests a new study. But why?Ancient 'Water Monster' Facing ExtinctionA foot-long salamander that was a key part of Aztec legend is threatened by extinction.Grand Canyon's Youth ConfirmedThe Grand Canyon is millions of years younger than previously thought, argue geologists.My Take: E-Voting Not User FriendlyOpinion: Electronic voting machines don't always capture the intent of voters.SLIDE SHOW: Landscapes of TerrorWhat makes a place feel scary? There are scientific explanations.At 40, Brain and Body SlowThe part of the brain in charge of motion starts a gradual slide in middle age.Spiders, Scorpions Among World's Oldest CreaturesMany creepy crawlies have been on Earth much longer than previously believed.Blood-Sucking Vampire Bats Sing DuetsWhite-winged vampire bats "harmonize" with separated roost mates. |
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