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Genesis cover

On Christmas Eve 1968 three Americans became the first humans to visit another world. What they did to celebrate was unexpected and profound, and will be remembered throughout all human history. Genesis: the Story of Apollo 8, Robert Zimmerman's classic history of humanity's first journey to another world, tells that story, and it is now available as both an ebook and an audiobook, both with a foreword by Valerie Anders and a new introduction by Robert Zimmerman.

 

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Two spaceports in Alaska sign partnership agreement

Alaska spaceports

The Alaska Aerospace Corporation, which runs the Kodiak spaceport in Alaska, has now signed a five year partnership agreement with University of Alaska’s Geophysical Institute in Fairbanks, which runs the Poker Flat suborbital spaceport, to upgrade the latter for commercial orbital launches.

Though the terms of that agreement are highly technical, Gov. Mike Dunleavy’s draft budget for the corporation indicates that the university plans to seek a FAA spaceport license for the university’s Poker Flat Research Range, which has been flying sounding rockets — smaller rockets used for research — into the upper atmosphere since March 1969, including some earlier this spring.

An FAA license could allow Poker Flat to launch larger rockets, and for commercial purposes, not just scientific ones. Making Poker Flat a “licensed vertical orbital spaceport” could take up to two years, the budget documents state.

The map to the right shows the location of each spaceport. You can read the text of the agreement here [pdf].

Kodiak has been used recently by several orbital rocket startups, most often by Astra. Poker Flat in turn has only done suborbital launches (mostly for universities), and its interior location suggests it would have a very limited capability to do orbital launches. The lower stages of any orbital rocket would crash either in Alaska or Canada, something that neither the U.S. or Canada has previously allowed.

The deal however allows both spaceports to coordinate their effort, which might bring more business to both, for different purposes.

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3 comments

  • Milkman

    I would assume they have better O-Rings these days….

  • Jeff Wright

    Well, SRBs were tremendously strong having to bear the weight of the whole shuttle stack –the orbiter a massive cantilever when the SSME’s were quiet–so just sitting on the pad out stress on them.

    SLS is in-line–and has modified O-rings.

    Most of what flies out of Alaska is much smaller with less weight issues.

    I think a whole pad is atop a massive lazy Susan, such that the rocket is only exposed to the elements before launch…a good defense against sea spray.

    That structure is a lot like train turntables.
    I have heard it said that the outfit behind that would be able to use that approach on larger rockets.

    R-7 petal system still amazes me…the polar opposite of chopsticks.

  • Matthew

    I can’t think of any reason to do it in this case, but SpaceX could of course launch from an inland spaceport without dropping a first stage on anyone.

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