 As you can see, the idea here is that a rocket
plane will be towed up to 20,000 feet, after which the tow will be
released and the space plane "Astroliner" will start its engines and
proceed to its designed height. so far, I'm not clear, from the details on their
website, what the X-Prize vehicle is. The website talks about a two-stage
spaceplane with an expendable booster, which is for orbital flights. Perhaps
what is being shown here is the space plane without the lower stage, and,
therefore, only enough power to execute a sub-orbital flight, and qualify for
the X-Prize, since the whole system, in this configuration is completely
re-usable. The Astroliner is quoted as being able to put 11,000 lb into a 100nm
orbit. The engines are given as conventional liquid oxygen and kerosene. |
The Kelly team appears to consist of 7 people,
by a photo on the X-Prize site. There is no team briefing to download, and it is
not at all clear from the website what progress has been made on the X-Prize
attempt, if any. The press releases just talk about awards, of substantial
amounts of cash, for contracts to do studies. There is no projected programme
for the X-Prize attempt, so I'm getting the feeling that not much has been built
and not much is going to be done the next year or two. Click
the X logo, below, to go to their website. There doesn't seem to be a Kelly Space
& Technology logo. Unusual, that. See what you think.

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