An
artist's rendition of XCOR Aerospace's Lynx space plane high above the
Earth. Roughly the size of a small private airplane, the craft is
designed to make several flights a day into a zero-gravity environment.
Credit: Mike Massee/XCOR
Credit: Mike Massee/XCOR
Lynx
XCOR
Aerospace's Lynx is a two-person suborbital space plane designed to
take off and land on a conventional airport runway. In addition to
flights with paying passengers, the rocket-powered vehicle is being
designed to carry scientific experiments on brief research flights.
XCOR has already signed a deal with the Southwest Research Institute, a nonprofit organization based in Boulder, Colo., to fly some of its scientists and experiments to suborbital space.
The Lynx could be in flight-test operations by the end of 2012, accoring to XCOR officials. The company plans to charge $95,000 per seat when the space plane is up and running.
NEXT STOP: Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo
XCOR has already signed a deal with the Southwest Research Institute, a nonprofit organization based in Boulder, Colo., to fly some of its scientists and experiments to suborbital space.
The Lynx could be in flight-test operations by the end of 2012, accoring to XCOR officials. The company plans to charge $95,000 per seat when the space plane is up and running.
NEXT STOP: Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo
Proposed design of Space Adventures' suborbital vehicle in ascent.
Credit: Background Photo: Richard Garriott/Design: Matt Ross
Credit: Background Photo: Richard Garriott/Design: Matt Ross
Armadillo Aerospace's Suborbital Vehicle
Armadillo
Aerospace, a Texas-based company founded by computer game entrepreneur
John Carmack, is developing a vertically launched spaceship for
suborbital flights.
Armadillo's spacecraft will have room for two passengers. The space tourism firm Space Adventures is booking seats on the craft for $110,000 each. An Arizona man recently won a free flight on the vehicle in a contest sponsored by Space Adventures and Seattle's Space Needle, though the date of his trip has yet to be set.
NEXT STOP: Bigelow Aerospace's Private Space Labs
Armadillo's spacecraft will have room for two passengers. The space tourism firm Space Adventures is booking seats on the craft for $110,000 each. An Arizona man recently won a free flight on the vehicle in a contest sponsored by Space Adventures and Seattle's Space Needle, though the date of his trip has yet to be set.
NEXT STOP: Bigelow Aerospace's Private Space Labs
Hang
Time: in Earth orbit courtesy of Bigelow Aerospace expandable modules.
The company unveiled a business plan to populate space with habitable
complexes for international space agencies and multinational
corporations.
Credit: Bigelow Aerospace
Credit: Bigelow Aerospace
Bigelow Aerospace's Private Space Stations
The
Nevada-based Bigelow Aerospace designs and builds large, expandable
habitats that it aims to link up in orbit, creating private space
stations.
Bigelow has already launched two prototype test habitats into orbit, one in 2006 and one in 2007. The company's current module, the six-person BA 330, provides about 11,650 cubic feet (330 cubic meters) of usable volume. Bigelow envisions joining at least two BA 330s together in space.
The company has separate partnerships with Boeing and SpaceX, whose craft would ferry passengers to and from Bigelow's huge space hotels. Potential clients include space agencies, government departments and research groups.
Bigelow has already launched two prototype test habitats into orbit, one in 2006 and one in 2007. The company's current module, the six-person BA 330, provides about 11,650 cubic feet (330 cubic meters) of usable volume. Bigelow envisions joining at least two BA 330s together in space.
The company has separate partnerships with Boeing and SpaceX, whose craft would ferry passengers to and from Bigelow's huge space hotels. Potential clients include space agencies, government departments and research groups.
http://www.space.com/15735-top-private-spaceships-countdown.html
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