European aerospace company EADS is starting mass production of orbital
aircraft in anticipation of an expected boom in space tourism.
Astrium, EADS' rocket division, is planning a craft that would take four
passengers 100km up into orbit, and believes that 15,000 people a year will be
willing to pay £160,000 for the privilege.
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The aircraft will use jet engines to fly to 12,000ft then use a disposable
rocket booster for 80 seconds to hit 100km.
After three minutes of weightlessness the aircraft will return to Earth and
land at one of up to 10 worldwide "spaceports".
"In Europe, I'd say the most likely location is around the Mediterranean
because there are blue skies most of the time, and from 100km you can see
mountains, the sea and the coast," Robert Laine, chief technical officer at
Astrium, told BBC News.
Laine was speaking at the Institution of Engineering and Technology, where he
was delivering the 99th Kelvin Lecture.
From 100km you can see mountains, the sea and the coast
Robert Laine Chief technical officer, Astrium
Astrium plans to produce 10 planes a year, each with a 10-year lifespan, but
will not run the craft itself. The firm hopes to sell them to companies such as
Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic which has a
deal
with Nasa to develop aircraft.
There is growing recognition that space travel is a viable business, and the
US government has already issued a 123-page report on recommendations for
space
travel tourism.
The number of flights projected is alarming some environmentalists, however,
since fuel makes up 50 per cent of the weight of each flight.
"Today we don't know how to go to space cheaply. Being able to climb on a
regular basis to 100km will give us the motivation to develop a plane that goes
not just up and down to the same place, but from here to the other side of the
Earth," said Laine.
"When the Ariane 5 takes off, 15 minutes later it is over Europe and 45
minutes later it is over the Pacific. The fastest way is to go outside the
atmosphere and that will be the future."
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