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Four new US spaceships may start launching people into space this year

F-22Raptor

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It looks like the United States' long human spaceflight drought is about to end, in a big way.

No astronauts have launched to orbit from American soil since July 2011, when NASA's space shuttle fleet was retired. Ever since, the nation has relied on Russian Soyuz rockets and spacecraft to get crewmembers to and from the International Space Station (ISS).

NASA is counting on the private sector to fill the shuttle's shoes. The agency's Commercial Crew Program awarded Boeing and SpaceX multibillion-dollar contracts in 2014 to get their astronaut taxis — CST-100 Starliner and Crew Dragon, respectively — up and running.

Both capsules are getting close, especially Crew Dragon, which now has two huge milestones under its belt. In March 2019, the SpaceX capsule flew an uncrewed test mission to the ISS called Demo-1. And, on Sunday (Jan. 19), Crew Dragon aced a crucial in-flight abort test (IFA), demonstrating the spacecraft's ability to get astronauts out of harm's way in the event of an emergency during launch.

NASA and SpaceX still need to analyze all of the data from the IFA, and agency officials want to see two more full-on tests of Crew Dragon's revamped parachute system. But once those boxes are checked, the capsule will be cleared to fly NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley to and from the ISS, on a test mission known as Demo-2.

It shouldn't be too long before that landmark launch; chances are good that Demo-2 will lift off sometime this spring, SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk said during a post-IFA news conference Sunday.

Contracted, operational crewed missions would then follow. SpaceX's 2014 deal, which is worth $2.6 billion, calls for the company to fly six such flights with Crew Dragon and the Falcon 9 rocket.

Boeing's contract has similar terms but is worth $4.2 billion. The aerospace giant's recent road has been a bit bumpier than that of SpaceX. During Starliner's version of Demo-1 — the uncrewed Orbital Flight Test (OFT), which occurred last month — the Boeing vehicle suffered a problem with its onboard timing system and got stranded in an orbit too low to allow rendezvous with the ISS. So, the capsule circled Earth by itself and came down after just two days in orbit instead of the originally planned eight.

But Starliner performed well during its time in space, and it pulled off a picture-perfect touchdown at White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico. Therefore, it's possible that the capsule's next flight will be a crewed test mission to the ISS, rather than a replay of OFT, NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said earlier this month. The agency is mulling the next steps and expects to make a decision in the coming weeks, he added.

(Unlike Crew Dragon, Starliner will not conduct an in-flight abort test. The Boeing capsule demonstrated its escape system on the ground last November, in a pad abort test. SpaceX also conducted a pad abort test, back in 2015.)

"We're on the cusp of commercializing low Earth orbit," Bridenstine said during Sunday's news conference.

And big things are happening in the suborbital arena as well. Indeed, two companies — Virgin Galactic and Blue Origin — may start flying passengers to this region of space in 2020.

Virgin Galactic has already flown two crewed suborbital missions with VSS Unity, its newest SpaceShipTwo space plane. These piloted test flights, which occurred in December 2018 and February 2019, didn't carry any paying customers, but that milestone is expected to occur sometime this year.

In August, for example, Virgin Galactic declared its Gateway to Space facility at Spaceport America in New Mexico operational. Spaceport America will be the center of Virgin Galactic's commercial operations; the six-passenger SpaceShipTwo, which is carried aloft by a plane called WhiteKnightTwo, will take off and land there.

More than 600 people have put down a deposit to ride to space on SpaceShipTwo; a seat aboard the vehicle currently costs $250,000.

Blue Origin, which was founded in 2000 by Amazon.com's Jeff Bezos, also may be gearing up for a big 2020. Last month, the company flew another uncrewed test mission with its reusable New Shepard system, which consists of a suborbital rocket and a six-passenger capsule. It was the sixth test flight for this New Shepard vehicle and the 12th for the system overall.

Blue Origin representatives had been aiming to start New Shepard passenger flights by the end of last year. It's no shock that this didn't happen; pushing timelines back is common in the world of human spaceflight. After all, in 2004, Virgin Galactic founder Richard Branson predicted that SpaceShipTwo would be fully operational by 2007. (There is an operational component to the test flights of both SpaceShipTwo and New Shepard, however; the vehicles commonly carry scientific experiments for NASA, university groups and other organizations.)

Indeed, Blue Origin recently "tapped the brakes" a bit to make sure all of New Shepard's various systems will be ready for passenger flights.

"We've got a couple of more [test] flights before we get there," Ariane Cornell, Blue Origin's director of astronaut and orbital sales, said during the webcast of New Shepard's December test mission.

But 2020 has just begun, so it's not hard to imagine New Shepard ticking the requisite boxes by the end of the year.

Blue Origin has not revealed an exact ticket price for New Shepard, saying only that it will cost "hundreds of thousands of dollars" initially. Both Virgin Galactic and Blue Origin aim to reduce ticket prices significantly over time, thereby opening up the opportunity to a much broader segment of the global population.

Stay tuned; it should be an exciting year!

https://www.space.com/new-private-american-crewed-spaceships-2020.html
 
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Imran Khan wants to end corruption in Mars.

Nawaz Sharif wants to build a trade corridor with India on Mars.

Zardari wants 10 percent of the total expenditure.

Altaf Hussein wants to murder the first man on Mars.

Musharaf once spent one night on darkside of mars behind Indian lines.

Fuwwad Choudary is chief executive of this mission.


The End !!

Imran Khan wants to end corruption in Mars.

Nawaz Sharif wants to build a trade corridor with India on Mars.

Zardari wants 10 percent of the total expenditure.

Altaf Hussein wants to murder the first man on Mars.

Musharaf once spent one night on darkside of mars behind Indian lines.

Fuwwad Choudary is chief executive of this mission.


The End !!

if someone is wondering i left out Bahria Mars and Mian Mansha.

i left it for @n3wbie
 
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How long will it take to launch 1.3 billion into space..............finally we can have peace and cleanliness on the mother earth


It looks like the United States' long human spaceflight drought is about to end, in a big way.

No astronauts have launched to orbit from American soil since July 2011, when NASA's space shuttle fleet was retired. Ever since, the nation has relied on Russian Soyuz rockets and spacecraft to get crewmembers to and from the International Space Station (ISS).

NASA is counting on the private sector to fill the shuttle's shoes. The agency's Commercial Crew Program awarded Boeing and SpaceX multibillion-dollar contracts in 2014 to get their astronaut taxis — CST-100 Starliner and Crew Dragon, respectively — up and running.

Both capsules are getting close, especially Crew Dragon, which now has two huge milestones under its belt. In March 2019, the SpaceX capsule flew an uncrewed test mission to the ISS called Demo-1. And, on Sunday (Jan. 19), Crew Dragon aced a crucial in-flight abort test (IFA), demonstrating the spacecraft's ability to get astronauts out of harm's way in the event of an emergency during launch.

NASA and SpaceX still need to analyze all of the data from the IFA, and agency officials want to see two more full-on tests of Crew Dragon's revamped parachute system. But once those boxes are checked, the capsule will be cleared to fly NASA astronauts Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley to and from the ISS, on a test mission known as Demo-2.

It shouldn't be too long before that landmark launch; chances are good that Demo-2 will lift off sometime this spring, SpaceX founder and CEO Elon Musk said during a post-IFA news conference Sunday.

Contracted, operational crewed missions would then follow. SpaceX's 2014 deal, which is worth $2.6 billion, calls for the company to fly six such flights with Crew Dragon and the Falcon 9 rocket.

Boeing's contract has similar terms but is worth $4.2 billion. The aerospace giant's recent road has been a bit bumpier than that of SpaceX. During Starliner's version of Demo-1 — the uncrewed Orbital Flight Test (OFT), which occurred last month — the Boeing vehicle suffered a problem with its onboard timing system and got stranded in an orbit too low to allow rendezvous with the ISS. So, the capsule circled Earth by itself and came down after just two days in orbit instead of the originally planned eight.

But Starliner performed well during its time in space, and it pulled off a picture-perfect touchdown at White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico. Therefore, it's possible that the capsule's next flight will be a crewed test mission to the ISS, rather than a replay of OFT, NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said earlier this month. The agency is mulling the next steps and expects to make a decision in the coming weeks, he added.

(Unlike Crew Dragon, Starliner will not conduct an in-flight abort test. The Boeing capsule demonstrated its escape system on the ground last November, in a pad abort test. SpaceX also conducted a pad abort test, back in 2015.)

"We're on the cusp of commercializing low Earth orbit," Bridenstine said during Sunday's news conference.

And big things are happening in the suborbital arena as well. Indeed, two companies — Virgin Galactic and Blue Origin — may start flying passengers to this region of space in 2020.

Virgin Galactic has already flown two crewed suborbital missions with VSS Unity, its newest SpaceShipTwo space plane. These piloted test flights, which occurred in December 2018 and February 2019, didn't carry any paying customers, but that milestone is expected to occur sometime this year.

In August, for example, Virgin Galactic declared its Gateway to Space facility at Spaceport America in New Mexico operational. Spaceport America will be the center of Virgin Galactic's commercial operations; the six-passenger SpaceShipTwo, which is carried aloft by a plane called WhiteKnightTwo, will take off and land there.

More than 600 people have put down a deposit to ride to space on SpaceShipTwo; a seat aboard the vehicle currently costs $250,000.

Blue Origin, which was founded in 2000 by Amazon.com's Jeff Bezos, also may be gearing up for a big 2020. Last month, the company flew another uncrewed test mission with its reusable New Shepard system, which consists of a suborbital rocket and a six-passenger capsule. It was the sixth test flight for this New Shepard vehicle and the 12th for the system overall.

Blue Origin representatives had been aiming to start New Shepard passenger flights by the end of last year. It's no shock that this didn't happen; pushing timelines back is common in the world of human spaceflight. After all, in 2004, Virgin Galactic founder Richard Branson predicted that SpaceShipTwo would be fully operational by 2007. (There is an operational component to the test flights of both SpaceShipTwo and New Shepard, however; the vehicles commonly carry scientific experiments for NASA, university groups and other organizations.)

Indeed, Blue Origin recently "tapped the brakes" a bit to make sure all of New Shepard's various systems will be ready for passenger flights.

"We've got a couple of more [test] flights before we get there," Ariane Cornell, Blue Origin's director of astronaut and orbital sales, said during the webcast of New Shepard's December test mission.

But 2020 has just begun, so it's not hard to imagine New Shepard ticking the requisite boxes by the end of the year.

Blue Origin has not revealed an exact ticket price for New Shepard, saying only that it will cost "hundreds of thousands of dollars" initially. Both Virgin Galactic and Blue Origin aim to reduce ticket prices significantly over time, thereby opening up the opportunity to a much broader segment of the global population.

Stay tuned; it should be an exciting year!

https://www.space.com/new-private-american-crewed-spaceships-2020.html
 
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Finally US humiliation is going to end. :enjoy:

I hope it can. Remember US brag about Boeing cargo capsule which ends up in disaster. This is manned mission and I hope nothing goes wrong. Keep finger cross and don't be too happy before the egg hatched.
 
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Finally US humiliation is going to end. :enjoy:

I hope it can. Remember US brag about Boeing cargo capsule which ends up in disaster. This is manned mission and I hope nothing goes wrong. Keep finger cross and don't be too happy before the egg hatched.


Humiliation? The US has achieved almost everything there is to achieve in the Solar System, including visiting every planet. Meanwhile China hasn’t visited a single one.

You sure run your mouth for a country that has achieved so little in space.
 
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Humiliation? The US has achieved almost everything there is to achieve in the Solar System, including visiting every planet. Meanwhile China hasn’t visited a single one.

You sure run your mouth for a country that has achieved so little in space.
Lol... Brag so much but can't even send a man to space for 9 years. You claim yourself as space power and great achievement? Too bad Russian is kind enough not to use manned mission to space to force Trump to kneel in front of Putin.
 
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Lol... Brag so much but can't even send a man to space for 9 years. You claim yourself as space power and great achievement? Too bad Russian is kind enough not to use manned mission to space to force Trump to kneel in front of Putin.
You think thats because they lost the technological capability. Typical Chinese high Iq.
 
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Lol... Brag so much but can't even send a man to space for 9 years. You claim yourself as space power and great achievement? Too bad Russian is kind enough not to use manned mission to space to force Trump to kneel in front of Putin.


The Space Shuttle was retired early without a replacement. The US never lacked the technological capability. Now that capability has returned to US soil.


Meanwhile, China has never been to another planet. And China is supposed to be a “space power?” What China is doing now the US achieved 50+ years ago.
 
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The Space Shuttle was retired early without a replacement. The US never lacked the technological capability. Now that capability has returned to US soil.


Meanwhile, China has never been to another planet. And China is supposed to be a “space power?” What China is doing now the US achieved 50+ years ago.
You are absolutely wrong. You have done it, doesn't meant you can do it again. US space during the space shuttle time absolutely lack a safe and cheap method to send man to ISS. They have no way in short time of 3-5 years to get a working soyuz. That is why they need Russia help. Russian has never reach another planet. But can you still discount them not as a space power? Just eat the humble and admit your inferiority when you spaceman sit in Russian space capsule to ISS. :enjoy:
 
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Please STFU.
US is unquestionably ahead.
What the fucking wrong with these stupid trolls from my country.


"US is far far ahead in terms of space tech, Russia and China are behind USA, China is catching up quickly recently", said China's rocket scientist.
 
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Please STFU.
US is unquestionably ahead.
What the fucking wrong with these stupid trolls from my country.


"US is far far ahead in terms of space tech, Russia and China are behind USA, China is catching up quickly recently", said China's rocket scientist.


He's trying to paint the US as inferior to both Russia and China in space tech and yet he is failing miserably.

What NASA has accomplished in planetary science and astrophysics alone is legendary. Not to mention its manned achievements. And here he is talking about "humiliation." What a joke...

While China is largely achieving things of the past, NASA is at the bleeding edge of space technology and achievements. For example, NASA is sending a helicoptor to Mars with the Mars 2020 rover, sending a probe to Europa to search for life, and a rotorcraft to Titan. Next year it will be launching the most advanced space telescope ever created in the James Webb. This year the US will be launching astronauts from its soil again and will be returning to the Moon again under the Artemis program.

The humiliation resides in China....
 
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He's trying to paint the US as inferior to both Russia and China in space tech and yet he is failing miserably.

What NASA has accomplished in planetary science and astrophysics alone is legendary. Not to mention its manned achievements. And here he is talking about "humiliation." What a joke...

While China is largely achieving things of the past, NASA is at the bleeding edge of space technology and achievements. For example, NASA is sending a helicoptor to Mars with the Mars 2020 rover, sending a probe to Europa to search for life, and a rotorcraft to Titan. Next year it will be launching the most advanced space telescope ever created in the James Webb. This year the US will be launching astronauts from its soil again and will be returning to the Moon again under the Artemis program.

The humiliation resides in China....
US is undoubtedly leading space tech/exploration.

There is no such thing called humiliation, neither for US nor for China. Or any other countries.
 
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You are absolutely wrong. You have done it, doesn't meant you can do it again.

umm, that is by definition you can do it again. Apart from reasons like the material used to construct the shuttle does not exist anymore, they have the material, method, blue print to build another Space Shuttle. And by definition, all they need to do is what they already have done in the 80s, and if they can send people to space in the 80s using the same tech, they would be able to send people to space in 2020s.

Now, whether or not they will do it is another issue. But if they can do it in the past, that mean they can do it again in the future.
 
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You are absolutely wrong. You have done it, doesn't meant you can do it again. US space during the space shuttle time absolutely lack a safe and cheap method to send man to ISS. They have no way in short time of 3-5 years to get a working soyuz. That is why they need Russia help. Russian has never reach another planet. But can you still discount them not as a space power? Just eat the humble and admit your inferiority when you spaceman sit in Russian space capsule to ISS. :enjoy:

Your "manned" space program in your Soyuz copy is a complete joke. Only 6 manned launches in 16 years. If anybody is skittish about the safety of their spacecraft it is you guys.

In less than 10 years we were already on the moon. In 16 years you haven't even launched your own spacecraft design. Why are you guys perpetual followers instead of leaders?

Geez even SpaceX has two Spacecraft designs. The smallest is for 7 people...and your old Soyuz design sits what...3 or something.

Screen Shot 2020-01-26 at 9.24.52 PM.jpg

What kind of early 1960's joke tech is this?? 3 people crammed into a small box?

Screen Shot 2020-01-26 at 9.16.05 PM.jpg

Hey this Russian Soyuz shot looks pretty familiar..even the same stick in the right hand to push buttons.

But of course to the Chinese it's their own "indigenous" design.

Come on it's 2020.
 
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