Technology

Microsoft Co-Founder to ‘Push Boundaries of Science’ With Venture Into Commercial Space Industry

SEATTLE (The Blaze/AP) — Bringing their interest in the high-tech field full circle, the tycoons of cyberspace are looking to bankroll America’s resurgence in outer space, reviving “Star Trek” dreams of their youth.

Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen made the latest step Tuesday, unveiling plans for a new commercial spaceship that, instead of blasting off a launch pad, would be carried high into the atmosphere by the widest plane ever built before it fires its rockets.

High Tech Minds Going Back to Star Trek Roots With Ventures Into Commercial Space Flight

Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen looks across at a model of a giant airplane and spaceship he plans on building. (Photo: AP/Elaine Thompson)

He joins Silicon Valley powerhouses Elon Musk of PayPal and Jeff Bezos of Amazon in a new private space race that attempts to fill the gap left when the U.S. government ended the space shuttle program.

Musk, whose Space Exploration Technologies will send its Dragon capsule to dock with the International Space Station in February, will provide the capsule and booster rocket for Allen’s venture, which is called Stratolaunch. Bezos is building a rival private spaceship.

Allen is working with aerospace pioneer Burt Rutan, who collaborated with the tycoon in 2004 to win a $10 million prize for the first flight of a private spaceship that went into space but not orbit.

Check out the Stratolaunch concept designs:

Allen says his enormous airplane and spaceship system will go to “the next big step: a private orbital space platform business.”

The new system is “a radical change” in how people can get to space, and it will “keep America at the forefront of space exploration,” Allen said.

High Tech Minds Going Back to Star Trek Roots With Ventures Into Commercial Space Flight

(Image: Stratolaunch System)

Their plane will have a 380-foot wingspan — longer than a football field and wider than the biggest aircraft ever, Howard Hughes’ Spruce Goose.

It will launch a space capsule equipped with a booster rocket, which will send the spacecraft into orbit. This method saves money by not using rocket fuel to get off the ground. The spaceship may hold as many as six people.

“When I was growing up, America’s space program was the symbol of aspiration,” said Allen, who mentioned his love of science fiction and early human spaceflights. “For me, the fascination with space never ended. I never stopped dreaming what might be possible.”

Allen is not alone in having such dreams, and the money to gamble on making them come true.

Bezos set up the secretive private space company Blue Origin, which has received $3.7 million in NASA start-up funds to develop a rocket to carry astronauts. Its August flight test ended in failure.

“Space was the inspiration that got people into high-tech … at least individuals in their 40s and 50s,” said Peter Diamandis, who created the space prize Allen won earlier and is a high-tech mogul-turned space business leader himself. “Now they’re coming full circle.”

Diamandis helped found a company that sends tourists to space for at least $25 million a ride, and seven of the eight rides involved high-tech executives living out their space dreams. One is a former Microsoft colleague of Allen’s, Charles Simonyi, who paid at least $20 million apiece for two rides into orbit and attended Allen’s Tuesday news conference, saying he wouldn’t mind a third flight.

“Space has a draw for humanity,” not just high-tech billionaires, Simonyi said, but he acknowledged that most people don’t have the cash to take that trip.

Space experts welcome the burst of high-tech interest in a technology that 50 years ago spurred the development of computers.

“Space travel the way we used to do it has a ‘50s and ’60s ring to it,” said retired George Washington University space policy professor John Logsdon. “These guys have a vision of revitalizing a sector that makes it 21st century.”

But Logsdon said the size of the capsule and rocket going to space seemed kind of small to him, only carrying 13,000 pounds. It didn’t seem like a game-changer, he said.

Stratolaunch’s air-launch method is already used by an older rocket company, Orbital Sciences Corp., to launch satellites. It’s also the same method used by the first plane to break the sound barrier more than 50 years ago.

Stratolaunch, to be based in Huntsville, Ala., bills its method of getting to space as “any orbit, any time.” Rutan will build the carrier aircraft, which will use six 747 engines. The first unmanned test flight is tentatively scheduled for 2016.

NASA, in a statement, welcomed Allen to the space business, saying his plan “has the potential to make future access to low-Earth orbit more competitive, timely, and less expensive.”

Unlike its competitors, Allen‘s company isn’t relying on start-up money from NASA, which is encouraging private companies to take the load of hauling cargo and astronauts to low Earth orbit and the International Space Station. The space agency, which retired the space shuttle fleet earlier this year, plans to leave that more routine work to private companies and concentrate on deep space human exploration of an asteroid, the moon and even Mars.

Allen’s company is looking at making money from tourists and launching small communications satellites, as well as from NASA and the Defense Department, said former NASA Administrator Michael Griffin, a Stratolaunch board member who spoke at a Tuesday news conference.

Just three months ago, Griffin was testifying before Congress that he thought the Obama administration’s reliance on private companies for space travel “does not withstand a conventional business case analysis.”

This is different because it’s private money, with no help or dependence on government dollars, said Griffin, who served under President George W. Bush.

Allen and Rutan collaborated on 2004′s SpaceShipOne, which was also launched in the air from a special aircraft in back-to-back flights. Sir Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic licensed the technology and is developing SpaceShipTwo to carry tourists to space. But Allen’s first efforts were more a hobby, while this would be more a business, Logsdon said.

SpaceShipOne cost $28 million, but this will cost much more, officials said.

Allen left Microsoft in 1983, and has pursued many varied interests since then. He‘s the owner of the Seattle Seahawks football team as well as the NBA’s Portland Trailblazers. He also founded a Seattle museum that emphasizes science fiction.

Allen said this venture fits with his technology bent.

“I’m a huge fan of anything to push the boundaries of science,” Allen said.

Earlier this year, Richard Branson unveiled the new “Spaceport America” under Virgin Galactic, another venture into commercial spaceflight.

Comments (20)

  • RamonPreston
    Posted on June 10, 2012 at 6:44am

    Another Microsoft product. When it crashes, just reboot.

    Report Post » RamonPreston  
  • Chi-Fawn
    Posted on December 19, 2011 at 12:47pm

    This is too cool! With the space plane and Richard Branson’s spaceport idea someday there can be other choices about where to go on vacation.

    Report Post »  
  • Jondolar
    Posted on December 18, 2011 at 12:17am

    Wonderful! I’m all for it, but was disappointed the article didn‘t seem to mention whether there’s an existing runway that would accommodate such a huge aircraft with those dimensions, or what the anticipated distances will be necessary for takeoff & landing. Perhaps there are a few around, but I can only think of the one in Grant County of Washington state that might be such a place.

    Report Post » Jondolar  
  • midnightgolfer
    Posted on December 17, 2011 at 7:52am

    Space available.

    Report Post »  
  • BigSaltyCracker
    Posted on December 16, 2011 at 7:38pm

    Wait till if downloads a update and crashes

    Report Post »  
  • bear14624
    Posted on December 16, 2011 at 3:28pm

    i cant help but wonder what will they do when they run out of people who can pay $25 million for a ride.

    Report Post » bear14624  
    • mrfunn
      Posted on December 16, 2011 at 6:40pm

      Perhaps we can stop paying the Russians for rides.

      Report Post »  
  • mrfunn
    Posted on December 16, 2011 at 1:45pm

    Had dreams of owning a VariEze way back when.
    I look forward to seeing this aircraft.

    Report Post »  
  • linearnonlinear
    Posted on December 16, 2011 at 1:26pm

    This guy can‘t even run a Cable company and he’s flying people into space! May God be with you!

    Report Post »  
  • Spencer
    Posted on December 16, 2011 at 1:09pm

    Fan-freaking-tastic. Go! Go! Go!
    The faster we get onto the next rock in space the better.

    Report Post » Spencer  
  • notreally
    Posted on December 16, 2011 at 6:35am

    NASA is a unionized lethargic bureaucratic giant. Only private enterprise will prevail over the surging effforts of China to dominate space.

    Report Post »  
  • dbk4939
    Posted on December 16, 2011 at 6:01am

    A vertical rocket burns the majority of it’s takeoff weight in in first stage fuel just getting through the lower atmosphere. Using many times re-usable aircraft as the “first stage” just makes good sense.

    This is an old idea reborn, remember seeing the first aircraft to fly into space, the X15, dropping off a B52 in the early 60′s.

    Report Post »  
    • payneme73
      Posted on December 16, 2011 at 10:39am

      Ditto. It is surprising NASA didn’t push more for an assisted launch by plane.

      A beautifuI plane in it’s simplicity. I think I would add a redundant cockpit & controls on the port side of that plane, though (but that’s just me).

      Report Post »  
    • mrfunn
      Posted on December 16, 2011 at 2:08pm

      Dual control systems are common. One cockpit saves space and more importantly weight.

      yep, Where was NASA?
      My guess is there was one or two designs on the drawing board. Expensive designs.

      Report Post »  
    • Chuck Stein
      Posted on December 16, 2011 at 3:35pm

      Correct. Even in the 1940′s, this concept was around with the Germans’ “Sanger Bomber” — fortunately for New York, they couldn’t follow through with the idea.

      Report Post »  
    • jmcenanly
      Posted on December 16, 2011 at 8:09pm

      One of the original concepts for the shuttle was to have a piloted booster which would glide back to the launch area after it had boosted the orbiter. Apparently those who held the purse strings thought that the expendable tanks and SRB’s would be cheaper.

      Report Post » jmcenanly  
    • mrfunn
      Posted on December 16, 2011 at 9:46pm

      Wasn’t the original concept much smaller?

      Report Post »  

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