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The Space Barons

Page 34

by Christian Davenport


  BE-4 engine, 207–208

  Beachey, Lincoln, 120

  Beal, Andy, 27–32, 34, 158

  Beal Aerospace, 30–34

  Beal Bank, 31

  Beal Conjecture, 28

  Beattie, Trevor, 112–113

  Bella, Charles “Cheater,” 11–13, 15–17

  Bergman, Jules, 125

  Bezos, Jackie, 62, 66, 192

  Bezos, Jeff, 7

  accessible space travel, 267

  Amazon business strategy, 14–15, 72–73

  author’s interview, 253–254

  background and family, 62–65

  Blue Origin start up, 74

  commercial space flights, 4

  competition over Launch Pad 39A, 181–184

  construction of Blue Origin, 55–57

  crew capsule

  education at Princeton, 69

  Explorers Club, 197–198

  fascination with rockets and space, 21–24

  first successful launch, 2–3

  funding Blue Origin, 253–254

  Goddard rocket, 145–147

  helicopter crash, 11–14, 17–18

  land acquisition, 26

  landings, 3–4

  lunar mission, 273–274

  Mars development, 258–259

  Musk’s rivalry with Bezos over orbital launch, 229–230, 233–235

  net worth, 15, 25

  passion for space, 65–67, 74–75, 253–256

  patent for rocket recovery, 199–200

  real estate acquisitions, 18–21

  rocket development, 262–263

  SEDS, 70–71

  underwater Saturn V rocket recovery, 187–196

  United Launch Alliance partnership, 208

  unveiling Blue Origin, 24–26

  See also Blue Origin

  Bezos, MacKenzie, 21

  Bezos, Mark, 192

  Bezos, Miguel “Mike,” 62, 192

  Big Fucking Rocket (BFR), 238–239, 272–273

  Bigelow, Robert, 116, 249, 274

  Binnie, Brian, 79–83, 86, 88, 91–96

  Black Ice, 4, 268–269

  Black Sky (documentary), 89

  Blakey, Marion, 125

  Blue Moon, 273–274

  Blue Operations LLC, 5, 21

  Blue Origin, 5–6

  ambitions for passenger market, 257–261

  BE-4 engine, 207–208

  Bezos unveiling, 24–25

  Bezos’s memorabilia collection, 251–252

  Bezos’s startup of, 74

  booster rocket trial, 1–2

  competition over Launch Pad 39A, 181–184

  construction of, 55–57

  first test vehicle, 76–77

  funding for, 253–254

  Garver’s tour of, 169–170

  goal of space development, 259–260

  goals of, 74–75

  Goddard rocket, 145–147

  John Glenn’s view of, 262

  land acquisition for, 18–21

  launch capability, 261

  lessening the secrecy over, 253

  Musk’s rivalry with Bezos over orbital launch, 229–230

  NASA bid, 179–180

  New Shepard rocket test, 221–223

  pad escape test, 179–180

  passengers in space, 256–257

  Personal Spaceflight Federation’s Valentine’s Day meeting, 116

  secrecy surrounding Goddard test, 166–168

  turtle mascot

  ULA partnership, 208

  “Very Big Brother” rocket, 223

  Virgin Galactic’s spaceplane development, 269

  See also Bezos, Jeff

  Bluebonnet Ordnance Plant, Texas, 30, 34

  Boeing, 6, 52–53, 139–140, 209. See also United Launch Alliance

  Bolden, Charlie, 162, 180, 209

  boost-back burn, 226

  booster landings, 270–271

  Borman, Frank, 257

  Boyle, Alan, 234

  Branson, Eva, 102–103

  Branson, Richard, 5, 7, 265

  Ansari X Prize entry, 92

  character and personality, 233

  commercial lunar travel, 110–111

  commercial space flights, 4

  miniature satellite industry, 249

  Musk’s rivalry with Bezos over orbital launch, 230

  passion for aviation, 102–104

  promoting commercial space travel, 211–212

  sending humans into orbit, 268

  space as religion, 109–110

  SpaceShipTwo crash, 214–215

  training for space flight, 113

  trans-Atlantic balloon flight, 101–104

  Virgin Atlantic, 104–106

  See also SpaceShipOne; SpaceShipTwo; Virgin Galactic

  Breaux, John, 50

  Brevard County Emergency Operations Center, 227

  Broadwater, John, 192

  Bruno, Tory, 207, 241

  Brunson, Doyle, 28–29

  bull whip, 22–23

  Bush, George W., 133, 156–157

  Cabana, Bob

  California Institute of Technology (CalTech), 25

  California Occupational Safety and Health Administration, 214–215

  Cantrell, Jim, 34–35, 41

  Cape Canaveral, 149–150, 171–173, 223, 225

  Capone, Vince, 192–195

  Caravan Club, 63

  cargo route to space, 157–159, 238, 260–261

  Carmack, John, 116, 126

  Carpenter, Scott, 173

  Cassini spacecraft, 121

  Cernan, Eugene, 156–157, 161, 172, 275

  Challenger II (Virgin Atlantic), 105–106

  Challenger Space Shuttle, 117

  Charon, 5, 76–77

  chemical rockets, 24

  chess set, zero gravity, 72

  Citizens Against Government Waste, 49

  citric acid, 169

  Colbert, Stephen, 240

  Cold War, 59–62, 171

  Collins, Michael, 142, 172

  colonization of space, O’Neill’s proposal for, 67–70

  Columbia Space Shuttle, 41, 43, 96, 117

  Commercial Orbital Transportation Services program (COTS), 5, 133, 137–141, 156

  Compaq, 36

  Concannon, David, 188, 191, 194–195

  Congress, US

  Beal advocating for private space programs, 33

  Musk’s demand for fairness in government contracting, 49–50

  NASA’s increasing reliance on the private sector, 160–161

  national security launches, 247–248

  oversight and regulation of the commercial space industry, 124–126

  SLS/Orion program, 244–245

  Conrad, Joseph, 120

  Conrad, Pete, 275

  conspiracy theories: SpaceX explosion, 240

  Constellation program, 139–140, 156–161, 244, 246

  contracts, government

  Blue Origin’s bid, 179–180

  COTS award winners, 137–140

  Defense satellite launch contracts, 52–54

  Falcon program, 130–134

  funding Blue Origin’s Goddard rocket, 167–168

  Northrop Grumman-SpaceX rivalry, 51–52

  Cooper, L. Gordon, 173

  Corporation, 28–29

  costcutting measures, 149–150, 153–154

  Couluris, John, 155

  Culbertson, Frank, 210

  Cunningham, Walter, 257

  Curiosity rover, 3

  Cygnus spacecraft, 210

  Davis, Steve, 135, 154, 176, 238

  death

  hazards of space flight, 119–121

  Mike Melvill’s escape from, 120

  SpaceShipOne explosion, 231–233

  SpaceShipTwo explosion, 214

  Defense, US Department of, 51

  satellite programs after 9/11, 52–54

  Soviets’ Sputnik launch, 59–60

  weaponization of space fligh
t, 127–129

  X-37B spaceplane, 163

  Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), 60, 127–132, 136

  Delta Clipper Experimental (DC-X) rocket, 25

  Delta II rocket, 40

  Delta IV rocket, 152

  Diamandis, Peter, 115–116

  Dodson, Ronny, 17–18

  Dragon spacecraft, 6, 144–145, 149, 166, 174–178, 209–210, 238, 270–271

  Eisenhower, Dwight D., 59–60, 206

  Ellis, Richard, 26

  energy generation and consumption, 259–260

  Enos (chimpanzee), 173

  environmental issues

  Bezos’s “Great Inversion” proposition, 258–260

  satellite monitoring, 267–268

  Space X land avoiding environmental regulations, 34

  Ericson, Todd

  Eutelsat, 262

  The Everything Store (Stone), 21

  expendable launch vehicles (ELVs), 199–200

  Explorers Club, 196–198

  explosions and crashes, 270

  Apollo 1, 121

  Falcon 1 rocket, 134–136

  Falcon 9 rocket, 203–204, 217–220

  SpaceShipOne, 82–84

  SpaceShipTwo, 212–216

  SpaceX, 239–241

  Virgin Galactic ship, 230–232

  F-1 engines. See Saturn V rocket

  FALCON (Force Application and Launch from CONUS), 127–129

  Falcon 1 rocket, 5

  crash, 134–136

  frugality in building, 154–156

  Kwaj launch, 132–134

  reusability, 43–44

  successful test, 142–144

  Washington ignoring, 42–43

  Falcon 5 rocket, 44

  Falcon 9 rocket, 6–7, 144

  development of, 126

  explosion, 203–204, 217–218

  federal certification of, 247–248

  first launch, 164–166

  ISS delivery, 175–176

  launch facility, 149

  NASA’s commercial crew program, 209

  Obama’s SpaceX visit, 163–164

  perfect landing, 270–271

  recycling old materials, 153

  return to service, 225–230

  Falcon Heavy, 174

  Farini, Guillermo, 122–123

  fatalities, 119

  feather system (SpaceShipOne), 81, 90–91, 108, 211–212, 231

  Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), 270

  Falcon 9 landing approval, 227

  Melvill’s “commercial astronaut” status, 91

  National Air and Space Museum party, 42

  regulating the emerging industry, 124–126

  SpaceShipOne test flights, 96–97

  federal funding of space exploration

  Musk’s rocket technology research, 40–41

  NASA and military stranglehold on the sector, 32–33

  NASA’s human space program, 39

  snubbing Musk’s SpaceX, 42

  squeezing out the private sector, 33–34

  See also NASA

  Floyd, Jean, 268

  Flying Heritage & Combat Armor Museum, Everett, Washington, 266

  Ford, Harrison, 112, 231

  Forrest, Ted, 28–29

  Founders, 113

  Founders Fund, 141

  fuel design, 225

  Gagarin, Yuri, 158, 173, 235

  Garver, Lori, 156–157, 162, 169–170, 177, 179–180

  Gass, Mike, 207

  Gedmark, John, 115, 118–119

  General Dynamics, 47

  geostationary transfer orbit (GTO), 224–225

  Gerstenmaier, Bill, 177

  Gise, Lawrence Preston, 61–65, 128–129, 253

  Glenn, John, 173, 226, 261–262

  Global Positioning System (GPS), 129

  globalsecurity.org, 137

  Goddard, Robert, 145–146

  Goddard rocket (Blue Origin), 5, 145–146, 166–168

  Gorbachev, Mikhail, 107

  Government Accountability Office (GAO), 48, 50

  Grasshopper rocket (SpaceX), 224

  Great Inversion, 258–260

  Grey Goose vodka, 211–212

  grid fins, 227

  Griffin, Michael, 39–40, 133, 138, 140, 160

  Grissom, Gus, 121

  Grush, Loren, 243

  Guadalajara, Mexico, 237–239

  Guthrie, Julian, 87

  Haise, Fred, 257

  Halaby, Najeeb, 110

  Haldeman, Joshua, 122–123

  Haldeman, Wyn, 122–123

  Hanks, Tom, 112

  hard and deeply buried targets (HDBT), 128

  Harman, Jennifer, 28

  Hart, Christopher

  Hawking, Stephen, 232

  Heinlein Prize

  Heister, Stephen, 250

  Hellfire missiles, 24

  Henderson, Bill, 67

  Herzfeld, Charles, 60

  The High Frontier (O’Neill), 67–68

  Hillary, Edmund, 197

  Holdren, 159

  Holland, Ty, 11–18

  Horkachuck, Michael, 156

  Hornik, Morris, 71–72

  Horowitz, Scott, 138

  How to Make a Spaceship (Guthrie), 87

  Hubble Space Telescope, 121

  Hughes, Tim, 139, 142, 151, 247–248

  Idea Man (Allen), 84

  infrastructure: Bezos’s vision of space development, 260–261

  Insprucker, John, 175–176

  International Astronautical Congress, 237–239, 242, 245–246

  International Space Station (ISS)

  COTS award projects, 137

  docking adapter technology, 46–47

  Dragon spacecraft, 144–145, 174–178

  Musk’s planned shuttles, 38–39

  NASA requirements for shuttles, 270–271

  NASA’s commercial crew program, 209–211

  3-D printer for creating parts, 249

  Internet

  Amazon business strategy, 14–15

  Musk’s entrepreneurialism, 35–36

  space frontier similarities, 267

  Interplanetary Transport System, 242

  Irwin, James, 274

  Jackson, C. D., 59

  Johnson, Roy, 61

  Jolie, Angelina, 112

  Jorgensen, Ted, 62

  Juncosa, Mark, 152

  Jurvetson, Steve, 248

  Kansas Cosmosphere and Space Center, 195

  Kármán line, 221

  Kelly, Michael, 125

  Kelly, Scott, 219

  Kennedy, John F., 117, 235

  Kennedy Space Center, 84

  Kistler Aerospace, 47–48, 50, 53, 137

  Koenigsmann, Hans, 135, 142, 151

  Korrell, Elizabeth, 11–13, 18–19

  Kranz, Gene, 121, 257

  Kutcher, Ashton, 112

  Land Rover, 211–212

  landing burn, 227

  landings, rocket, 1–3

  Falcon 9’s return to flight, 217–218, 225–227

  Melvill’s test flight of SpaceShipOne, 87–91

  New Shepard’s self-guiding system, 222–223

  New Shepard’s test flight and landing, 221–223

  orbital-class rockets, 224–225

  SpaceShipOne’s crash, 82–83

  SpaceShipOne’s fourth flight, 96

  lasers, rocket propulsion with, 23

  The Late Show with Stephen Colbert (television program), 270

  Lauer, Matt, 215

  launch capability. See rocket technology

  Launch Pad 14, 173

  Launch Pad 39A, 6, 172–174, 178, 181–184, 223–224, 270–271

  Lee, Gentry, 243

  Lehman, Matthew, 182–183

  Lembeck, Michael, 40

  Letterman, David, 157

  libertarianism, 118

  Lindbergh, Charles, 116

  Lindstrand, Per, 101–104

  liquid nitrogen tank, 149�
��150

  litigation

  Alliance blocking SpaceX launches, 205–206

  Bezos’s patent for rocket recovery, 199–200

  Musk’s suit of NASA over contract bids, 48–49

  Lockheed Martin, 52–53, 130–131, 244–245. See also United Launch Alliance

  Lord Jim (Conrad), 120

  Losing My Virginity (Branson), 101

  Lovell, James, 161, 257

  Lovelock, James, 113

  low Earth orbit (LEO), 38, 267

  lunar colonization. See moon colonization

  lunar landing. See moon landing

  Made In Space venture, 249

  Magellan, Ferdinand, 119–120

  Manchester by the Sea (film), 254

  manned flight

  Allen’s anxiety over, 91–92

  risks and excitement of, 121–122

  Scaled Composites plan, 85–86

  See also Ansari X Prize; SpaceShipOne

  Manning, Rob, 39–40

  Mariner missions, 223

  Mars colonization and missions, 7

  Bezos’s commitment to travel, 258–259

  dangers, 121

  Falcon 9’s success as step towards, 229

  landings, 3

  Muskଁs agenda for, 38–41, 271–272

  Musk’s concerns over asteroid collisions, 37–38

  Musk’s International Astronautical Congress address, 237–239, 242, 245–246

  Musk’s lunar base plan, 272–273

  Musk’s reasons for founding of SpaceX, 123–124

  Obama on deep space exploration, 161–162

  SpaceX marketing its program, 246–248

  Mars Oasis, 39–40

  Mars Pathfinder, 40

  Marshall Islands, 131

  Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Alabama, 48, 65–66

  Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), 70

  Mauldin, R. Daniel, 28

  Max-Q, 218

  McNeil, Wilfred, 61

  media

  Musk as cult figure, 204–206

  Musk’s rivalry with Bezos over orbital launch, 233–235

  Sex Pistols scandal, 105

  See also Twitter

  Melvill, Mike, 79–81, 83, 87–95, 120

  Melvill, Sally, 89–92, 94

  Mercury program, 84, 173, 226

  Meyerson, Rob, 170, 180

  Mica, John, 124–125

  Mishap Investigation Board, 136

  Mitchell, Edgar, 275

  Montgomery, James, 110

  moon colonization and missions

  Bezos’s plan, 273–274

  Musk’s plans for civilian passengers, 272–273

  promoting commercial interest in, 109–113

  moon landing, 255

  George Mueller’s role in, 47

  inspiring commercial moon travel, 110

  Launch Pad 39A, 172

  young Bezos’s interest in, 62–63

  Mosdell, Brian, 149–153, 163, 165–166

  Mount Washington, New Hampshire, 119

  Mueller, George, 47

  Mum’s the Word (Branson), 103

  Museum of Pop Culture, Seattle, Washington, 84–85

  Musk, Elon, 3–7

  as cult figure, 204–207

  Bezos’s conception for space travel, 258–259

 

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