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Masten Space wins "Vision to Reality" award

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  • Masten Space wins "Vision to Reality" award

    David Masten, CEO of
    Masten Space Systems,
    featured in Aviation Week



    Note that Xoie flies autonomously; following a flight plan, but it has to make all the moves itself. The tech is being developed as both an unmanned/manned suborbital system and as a lander for beyond Earth orbit missions.

    In winning the NGLLC contest it had to lift off, hover at various altitudes, translate horizontally a considerable distance then hover again before performing a pinpoint landing at a different location. It flew a near perfect mission. This flight profile is much like that performed by the Boeing DC-X test rocket and to what Blue Origin plans for the takeoff/landings of its very black and military-connected New Shepard.

    Masten Space Systems designs, builds, tests and operates reusable launch vehicles. Reusable launch vehicles will enable an increase in flight rate, drive down the cost of space access, and allow more people to reach space.




    Prestigious 2010 “Vision to Reality” Award Goes to Masten Space Systems

    by Space Frontier Foundation on June 24, 2010

    Space Frontier Foundation (SFF) leaders have announced that Masten Space Systems is the recipient of the 2010 “Vision to Reality” Award in recognition of their 2009 Northrop Grumman Lunar Lander Challenge win, with a nearly perfect flight of their Xoie vehicle. The award will be presented to the Mojave, California based rocket firm during the NewSpace Awards Gala, a highlight of the NewSpace 2010 Conference to be held July 23-25 in Silicon Valley, CA.

    “Masten’s flight was the culmination of a close race for the prize between them and Armadillo Aerospace, and we expect to see both companies doing great things in the future,” said SFF Chairman Bob Werb. “Masten’s precision lunar flight demonstration shows we can do amazing things at low cost outside of the government, do them quickly, and do them right.”

    One of several contenders for the 2010 “Vision to Reality” Award, it was a narrow win for Masten over NASA’s Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite (LCROSS) project that helped confirm water on the Lunar surface. One obvious nominee was SpaceX, for the successful launch of the Falcon 9 rocket in May, but they were not eligible – having received the award last year for their successful Falcon 1 flight.

    “Sometimes progress forward is imperceivable to the public eye, then all within one year we have several great contenders achieving breakthroughs,” said SFF Executive Director, William Watson. “Besides Masten’s accomplishment, NASA’s lunar team really expanded our knowledge base of the resources necessary to live and work on the Moon, and SpaceX keeps doing great things to open the space frontier.”

    “Vision to Reality” Award

    The “Vision to Reality” Award is bestowed for outstanding achievement in the development and operation of a device, system, or entity that clearly forwards the opening of the space frontier. The winners must actually have succeeded in reaching their goal and the achievements must have taken place within the 12 months prior to call for nominations. Good ideas, business plans, or anything requiring “unobtainium” is not eligible.

    The founders of the International Space University were presented the first “Vision to Reality” Award in 1993 and their visionary institution is still a very real success. Dennis Tito took the award in 2001 for becoming the world’s first citizen space explorer, and in 2004 Burt Rutan accepted the Award on behalf of the Scaled Composites team for flying the first private, human-piloted spaceship into space. Other past winners include the Clementine Lunar Orbiter team, Space Adventures, SpaceHab Inc., Celestis Inc., and XCOR Aerospace.
    Last edited by Dr Mordrid; 25 June 2010, 15:51.
    Dr. Mordrid
    ----------------------------
    An elephant is a mouse built to government specifications.

    I carry a gun because I can't throw a rock 1,250 fps
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