Humans have always been adventurous and pioneering species. At very high risks, humans have climbed difficult mountain terrains and gone into adventures to explore never before seen hostile locations while not having any real idea on what they might find. These risk-taking adventurous spirits, even though at times costly, have ultimately helped the human civilization to progress, evolve and thrive. Since the early 20th century, space and air have been two of man's biggest frontiers. Only in the last few years has there been another spark of innovations in space flights, since the space aeronautics industry captured the interest of interest to private sector firms, that too, at the behest of encouragement from the government. Commercialization and privatization of space flights has brought in the much needed energy in the space industry. In fact, privatization alone has brought about new possibilities and concepts in the few years it has been implemented. However, there are many obstacles that still block the achievement of the goal of making space flights a reality for the common man. This study will investigate the perceptions, barriers and regulations involved in private space flights and how the latest launch failure of both Orbital Sciences and SpaceX rockets including the 2014 accident of SpaceShipTwo that is still being investigated by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and the National Transport and Safety Board (NTSB) and the manner in which the outcomes affected the view of the public towards commercial space travel.
Research question or problem statement
Space travel industry has a comparatively short history. In spite of its initial sluggishness, the industry has experienced rapid developments over the last 20 or so years. Once a government-only industry, the space industry has now also attracted investments from private entities. Since the initial commercial space travel that occurred in the year 2001, quite a number of other rich space tourists have voyaged into space by purchasing space flight tickets. Currently, over 625 individuals have booked sub-orbital space travel on the Virgin Galactic (Soular, 2013). However, there are still many huge barriers in turning space travel into a reality for the common man. This paper looks into this issue in depth and analyzingthe reasons thereto.
Literature Review
It has been quite a difficult year for space travel. The recent disintegration of Falcon 9, a SpaceX rocket that was bound for the ISS (International Space Station) was the first for that space vehicle, however the case is not the same for NASA which has now witnessed a 75% failure rate in the last 8 months out of four spacecrafts it had contracted to ferry supplies to the ISS. In October last year, an Orbital Sciences rocket, Antares, crashed and burned several seconds after launch. Then in April of this year an unmanned Russian Spacecraft, Progress 59, lost contact with the ground station causing it to veer out of orbit and later disintegrate in the atmosphere. Both Antares and Progress 59 space vehicles were carrying equipment, food and scientific research material to the ISS, just as the case was with the recent disintegration of Dragon, another SpaceX rocket during its lift off from Cape Canaveral Space Station in Florida. All 3 accidents seem to not be related, and space industry stakeholders have been repeating over and over again their usual tune after the occurrence of the latest accident: that rocket science will always be rocket science and a certain degree of failure cannot be avoided. However, despite these sentiments, the many accidents have numerous spectators worried, particularly members of Congress who are shelving NASA's bill and have of late been reluctant to allocate funds for the agency's partnerships with private commercial entities such as SpaceX (Moskowitz, 2015).
The support of the general public towards the commercialization of the space industry also took a hit last year barely 72 hours after the Orbital Sciences Antares mishap when SpaceShipTwo, a Virgin Galactic suborbital spacecraft, crashed during a test flight, resulting in one fatality. Yet despite there being an investigation into that accident, Virgin Galactic is still moving ahead with its plans to fly space tourists across short arcs on the edge of space form its futuristic New Mexico facility referred to as Spaceport America (Moskowitz, 2015). In cases such as this where the project involves flying only rich people paying huge amounts of money to get them briefly into space, then many people are skeptical and justifiably so that such a project would bring any significant or meaningful benefit to the society as a whole. As it stands, every tourist has paid over $20 million for a short 7 day trip...
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