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Burt Rutan talks about commercial Moon-orbit

The visionary designer's ultimate goal is an orbiting hotel.
By Dick McNally Published: August 3, 2009
Burt Rutan
Burt Rutan
Photo by Dick McNally
August 3, 2009
If aircraft- and spaceship-designer Burt Rutan has his way, many people now alive will have the opportunity to orbit the Moon later in this century. Rutan, who spoke July 31 at the Experimental Aircraft Association's (EAA) national convention in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, is famous for his design of SpaceShipOne, the first commercial craft to take a man into suborbital space, in 2004.

The aircraft guru says his immediate goal in designing the upcoming SpaceShipTwo system for Virgin Galactic airlines is to allow thousands of people the chance to take suborbital flights into space (above 62 miles [100 km] altitude). The flights would allow six passengers on each launch to experience weightlessness for more than 3 minutes. Rutan says Virgin Galactic will eventually have the capability to fly three to four missions each day, using multiple launchers. He already has completed a prototype mother ship for SpaceShipTwo, called WhiteKnightTwo. WhiteKnightTwo flew at the air show July 31, the same day Rutan spoke.
WhiteKnightTwo
WhiteKnightTwo flew at the EAA airshow “AirVenture” in Oshkosh July 31.
Photo by Chris Eicher
"I want to see people flying their kids in space," the engineer said. "Kids should be inspired by phenomenal things that happen." He also said the space-tourist business should be based on volume. "(Volume) is the only thing that hasn't been done in space," he said. The visionary designer hopes such a volume business will fund his ultimate goal — an orbiting hotel. The hotel could provide shuttle trips to orbit the Moon at extremely low altitudes.

Rutan says that, since the Moon has no atmosphere, it will be possible to skim only hundreds of feet above the surface at some 7,000 mph (11,000 km/h) in an orbiting spacecraft with tourists aboard. He hopes his company will develop the orbital hotel and Moon shuttle within 40 years.
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