Calif. aerospace company unveiling new
rocket for space tourism
LOS ANGELES (AP) — A California aerospace company plans
to enter the space tourism industry with a two-seat rocket ship capable of
suborbital flights to altitudes more than 37 miles above the Earth.
The Lynx, about the size of a small private plane, is
expected to begin flying in 2010, according to developer Xcor
Aerospace, which planned to release details of the design at a news conference
Wednesday.
The company also said that, pending the outcome of
negotiations, the Air Force Research Laboratory has awarded it a research
contract to develop and test features of the Lynx. No details were released.
Xcor’s
announcement comes two months after aerospace designer Burt Rutan
and billionaire Richard Branson unveiled a model of SpaceShipTwo,
which is being built for Branson’s Virgin Galactic space tourism company and
may begin test flights this year.
Xcor
intends to be a spaceship builder, with another company operating the Lynx and
setting prices.
The Lynx is designed to take off from a runway like a
normal plane, reach a top speed of Mach 2 and an altitude of 200,000 feet, then
descend in a circling glide to a runway landing.
Shaped something like a bulked-up version of the Rutan-designed Long-EZ home-built aircraft, its wings will
be located toward the rear of the fuselage, with vertical winglets at the tips.
Powered by clean-burning, fully reusable, liquid-fuel
engines, the Lynx is expected to be capable of making several flights a day, Xcor said.
“We have designed this vehicle to operate much like a
commercial aircraft,” Xcor Chief Executive Officer
Jeff Greason said in a statement.
Greason
said the Lynx will provide affordable access to space for individuals and researchers,
and future versions will offer improved capabilities for research and
commercial uses.
Rich Pournelle, Xcor’s director of business development, said initial
testing of the Lynx will be conducted at the Mojave Airport north of Los
Angeles.
Xcor
is also negotiating with various spaceports to set up franchises, “and New
Mexico is at the top of the list, based on the significant financial commitment
the state has made towards the spaceport,” he said.
A planned $198 million Spaceport America complex would
cover 27 square miles near southern New Mexico’s White Sands Missile Range,
where the U.S. launched its first rocket after World War II.
Xcor
has spent nine years developing rocket engines in a facility down the flightline from Rutan’s Scaled
Composites LLC at the Mojave Airport. It has built and flown two rocket-powered
aircraft.
SpaceShipTwo
is being developed on the success of SpaceShipOne,
which in 2004 became the first privately funded, manned rocket to reach space,
making three flights to altitudes between 62 miles and 69 miles and winning the
$10 million Ansari X Prize.
Powered by a hybrid engine — the gas nitrous oxide
combined with rubber as a solid fuel — SpaceShipTwo
will be flown by two pilots and carry up to six passengers who will pay about
$200,000 apiece for the ride.
Like its predecessor, SpaceShipTwo
will be taken aloft by a carrier airplane and then released before firing its
rocket engine. Virgin Galactic says passengers will experience about 4½ minutes
of weightlessness and will be able to unbuckle themselves to float in the cabin
before returning to Earth as an unpowered glider.
Xcor’s Lynx also is intended to return
as a glider but with the capability of restarting its engine if needed.