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Friday, April 8, 2016

Fwd: Meet the latest multimillionaire with an out-of-this-world idea for space



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From: "Gary Johnson" <gjohnson144@comcast.net>
Date: April 7, 2016 at 9:10:59 AM CDT
To: "Gary Johnson" <gjohnson144@comcast.net>
Subject: FW: Meet the latest multimillionaire with an out-of-this-world idea for space

 

Meet the latest multimillionaire with an out-of-this-world idea for space

By Christian Davenport April 6 at 3:42 PM

 

Bigelow Aerospace is expected to begin testing these space habitats aboard the International Space Station. (Bill Ingalls/NASA/Reuters)

The class of wealthy entrepreneurs who have turned their childhood space passions into emerging companies has been dominated by some of the biggest names in technology and business--Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Richard Branson, Paul Allen. But now another wealthy, if lesser known, entrepreneur is about to join them on the public stage, unveiling his plans for how humans will finally spread out into the stars to stay.

On Friday, Robert Bigelow, who made millions with his extended stay hotels, is planning to send his expandable space habitat to the International Station. Once in orbit, the module will be attached to the station, inflated and then tested over a two-year period to see how it fares against the harsh environment of space. From time to time, the astronauts aboard the station will venture into the bedroom-sized pod--the first ever expandable habitat to be attached to the station, to take measurements.

Called the BEAM, the Bigelow Expandable Activity Module, is made of a kevlar-like material that expands in space once it is filled with air. Bigelow, the founder of Budget Suites of America, said he had invested $290 million of his fortune into Nevada-based Bigelow Aerospace, which has been working to develop the technology for years.

The habitat is scheduled to be flown to the station by SpaceX, founded by Musk, one of the leaders of what's often called the New Space movement--innovative ventures hoping to democratize space the way commercial aviation has.

"We're hoping this gets us a foot in the door," Bigelow said in an interview this week.

The BEAM is a first step for expandable manned habitats, but the company has already developed another line, the B330, which is 20 times as big that it hopes to also test out on the space station in preparation for flying them by 2020, Bigelow said.

The company has already been in talks with commercial companies and foreign governments who want to fly their experiments and astronauts to the micro-gravity environment of space, Bigelow said. There is only so much room on the International Space Station, where competition for time and space can sometimes be fierce, he said.

"It's not as though there isn't a demand," he said.

There are six astronauts on the station at any one time. The Russians and Americans get most of the slots, meaning there are lot of countries whose astronauts fly only infrequently.

"How are they going to have a human space program if they fly once every three years," he said. "That's nothing. We've had a lot of conversations with different countries, and we know they are potentially costumers for us."

NASA is interested in the technology as well for its deep space missions. The expandable modules can be packed up tight so they don't take up as much room on a rocket as traditional habitats. That's key, NASA said in a blog post last year, for manned missions to Mars, where "several rockets filled with cargo and supplies will be deployed to await the crews' arrival."

A lower-volume inflatable habitat could reduce the number of launches needed for the mission and bring down the cost, NASA said.

Bigelow said the habitats could be used by astronauts visiting the moon. Once a fleet of the habitats is set up in low Earthy orbit, a space tug vehicle could pull the habitats into lunar orbit to await the explorers. The habitats could even land if outfitted with the right equipment, and be used as a lunar base.

But that's years off.

In the meantime, the BEAM is scheduled to stay affixed to the station for two years while it's tested for radiation, temperature and how it stands up to debris swirling through space at 17,500 mph.

The BEAM was supposed to fly to the station last year but was delayed after SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket exploded.

SpaceX's launch is scheduled for Friday afternoon from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. It'll be the first flight to resupply the space station with food and supplies since one of its Falcon 9 rockets blew up last year. SpaceX promises a show of its own after the launch, attempting another one of its landing on a floating platform at sea.

In December, SpaceX successfully landed its booster vertically on a landing pad at Cape Canaveral, but so far has not been quite able to pull it off on the sea platform it calls an autonomous spaceport drone ship. The company is on a quest to recover and reuse the first stage of its rockets, the most expensive part, in an effort to lower the cost of spaceflight.

 

Christian Davenport covers federal contracting for The Post's Financial desk. He joined The Post in 2000 and has served as an editor on the Metro desk and as a reporter covering military affairs. He is the author of "As You Were: To War and Back with the Black Hawk Battalion of the Virginia National Guard."

 

 

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