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The mission cost will be about $1.8 million and all funds will come from private sources, he said. LightSail-1 will be built by Stellar Exploration Inc. of San Luis Obispo, Calif. Friedman said the launch vehicle has not been chosen yet. Because of its small size, the spacecraft can "piggyback" on another mission's rocket as long as it is going to the right orbit, Friedman said. The LightSail-2 spacecraft is planned for higher altitude orbits, and LightSail-3 is intended to be sent farther into space. Both missions will be planned to last much longer than the first. The society was not deterred by its previous failure and has not bitten off more than it can chew, Friedman said. "There's always a little bit of arrogance in anybody building a spacecraft," he said. "These things are counterintuitive in so many ways, but you believe you can do it and when we succeed it's incredibly rewarding." The society was founded in 1980 by Sagan, former Jet Propulsion Laboratory director Bruce Murray, and Friedman, a veteran of deep space mission planning at JPL.
[Associated
Press;
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