SpaceX and NASA To Collaborate on Red Dragon
California-based company Space Exploration Technologies, better known as
SpaceX, is working with NASA to get to Mars on a project called "Red
Dragon."
Space Exploration Technologies
SpaceX was founded in 2002 by Elon Musk, the man also responsible for
Tesla Motors and PayPal. The company develops technologies from cargo capsules
to high-powered rockets that are then contracted out by clients including NASA,
the U.S. military, and various non-governmental and private sector
entities.
Currently, SpaceX holds a hard-fought $1.6 billion contract with NASA for
12 resupply flights to the International Space Station. It turns out even with
Musk's practiced business savvy, there's a pretty steep learning curve to rocket
science. But after years of trying, SpaceX eventually succeeded in demonstrating
its ability to get cargo into and out of orbit to NASA's satisfaction. That's a
pretty marketable achievement.
The most significant technologies developed by SpaceX thus far are its
Dragon cargo capsule, "which has already flown six resupply missions to the
International Space Station for NASA," and its Falcon rocket models, the first
privately built and liquid-fueled rocket boosters to make it to orbit. Both the
Dragon capsule and the Falcon Heavy rocket are integral to project Red
Dragon.
Project Red Dragon
The Red Dragon project is currently an unapproved concept, but an
extremely promising one. Its aim would be to pick up Mars samples, collected by
the next NASA rover scheduled to launch in 2020, and bring them back to Earth
for analysis.
Interest in Mars surface samples has risen steadily since the discovery of
further evidence suggesting a habitable environment on the Red Planet, such as
the presence of liquid water. The kind of analysis that would offer the most
information about the Mars environment can really only be conducted by human
scientists in well-developed labs on Earth, rather than by a robotic rover
analyzing data on site and then transmitting it back to Earth. For that reason,
the U.S. National Research Council named the return of Mars surface samples to
Earth as NASA's highest-priority budget item for the coming years.
Logistically, the Red Dragon mission would use the Falcon Heavy rocket to
launch a "Red Dragon" modified version of the ISS Dragon cargo capsule into
space towards Mars. The Red Dragon model would include a robotic arm for
grabbing the samples, as well as extra fuel and vehicles for Mars Ascent and
Earth Return. Red Dragon could launch by 2022.
Space Exploration and the Private Sector
SpaceX hopes to economize the considerable costs of planetary science
technologies, a goal that has informed their production and contracting models
from the start. If Red Dragon gets the green light, it could further solidify
the place of private firms in exploration of the final frontier, in addition to
bringing home exciting information about humankind's future with the Red
Planet.
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First Manned Flight of Nasa's Orion May Be Delayed to
2023
Nasa's Orion spaceship, which is being built to one day carry astronauts to
deep space, may not launch with crew on board until 2023, the US space agency
said Wednesday.
The delay could set back the mission which is costing Nasa $6.77 billion
(roughly Rs. 44,778 crores) nearly two years.
After the latest mission review in August, Nasa has "much lower
confidence" that the current target date of 2021 can be met and is considering
the possibility of launching no later than April 2023, said Nasa associate
administrator Robert Lightfoot.
NASA delays First Manned Flight Orion until 2023 Spacesuit engineers demonstrate how four crew members would be arranged for launch inside the Orion spacecraft, using a mockup of the vehicle at Johnson Space Center. Credits: NASA/Robert Markowitz The first manned flight Orion of NASA has undergone procrastination. Its launch date is now set for the year 2023. |
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