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Space transportation 2.0 to feature air-launch system

By | December 13, 2011, 3:59 PM PST

The space shuttle program may have retired, but space transport may be in for a resurgence.

Thanks to some forward-thinking, a project is now in the works that would use a plane to launch booster rockets with cargo (and, eventually, people) into low earth orbit.

But not just any plane - it would be the world’s largest aircraft ever, one with a wingspan of 385 feet (a whopping 120 feet wider than the Airbus 380).

Paul Allen, the co-founder of Microsoft, has teamed up with aerospace engineer Burt Ratan and Elon Musk, of SpaceX, to create Stratolaunch Systems. “By the end of this decade, Stratolaunch will be putting spacecraft into orbit,” Allen said on Tuesday.

The plane will be designed by Scaled Composites, a company founded by Rutan. It will weigh 1.2 million lbs. (including the weight of the 490,000-lb. booster rocket, which SpaceX is designing). The extra-large aircraft will need an extra-large runway - 12,000 feet long, to be exact.

“We believe this technology has the potential to someday make spaceflight routine by removing many of the constraints associated with ground launched rockets,” said former NASA administrator Mike Griffin, who now sits on the board of Stratolaunch. The company says its technology will provide orbital access more safely, cheaply and with greater flexibility than has been possible in the past.

Stratolaunch expects to begin launching commercial and government payloads into orbit within five years, with the ability to transport people into orbit following once the technology’s safety is determined.

See the company’s animated demonstration of the rocket launcher in action:

Photo: Stratolaunch Systems

via [Wired]

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Channtal Fleischfresser

About Channtal Fleischfresser

Channtal Fleischfresser is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Channtal Fleischfresser

Channtal Fleischfresser

Contributing Editor

Channtal Fleischfresser has worked for The Economist, WNET/Channel 13, Al Jazeera English, Wall Street Journal and Associated Press. She holds degrees from the University of Pennsylvania and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism. She is based in New York.

Follow her on Twitter.

Channtal Fleischfresser

Channtal Fleischfresser

Channtal does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what she covers.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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NASA laughed at him.
NASA thought he was nuts when Rutan brought this concept and the Spaceship 1 concept to them about 10 years ago.

Who is laughing now.
Posted by Hates Idiots
14th Dec 2011
+1 Vote
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Interesting Concept
Would like to see the commercialization of space flight by private industry. If this has a similar results pattern as NASA in a more economical package, the roll of NASA could be drastically changed in the future.
Posted by dcr100@...
17th Dec 2011
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