Tesla chief Musk's latest idea: Intercity
rocket travel
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[October 02, 2017]
By Sonali Paul and Tom Westbrook
ADELAIDE/SYDNEY (Reuters) - Silicon Valley
billionaire Elon Musk on Friday outlined ambitious plans for a manned
mission to Mars and a rocket capable of carrying passengers from one
continent to another on Earth.
SpaceX plans its first trip to the red planet in 2022, carrying only
cargo, to be followed by a manned mission in 2024, Musk, who runs the
company and electric luxury car company Tesla Inc, said at a conference
in Adelaide.
NASA's first human mission to Mars is expected about a decade later.
Musk, the chief executive and lead designer of Space Exploration
Technologies, said SpaceX has shrunk the size of the rocket ship it is
developing to go to Mars, aiming to start construction on the first
spaceship in the first half of next year.
As for the intercontinental passenger rocket - a concept familiar to
science fiction fans - Musk said, "If you build a ship that's capable of
going to Mars, what if you take that same ship and go from one place to
another on Earth? We looked at that and the results are quite
interesting."
He then showed the conference audience a video of images of a rocket
taking off in New York City and landing in various places around the
world, with words on the screen showing flight times of less than an
hour between any two cities on opposite sides of the world. A New
York-to-Shanghai trip could be done in 39 minutes, for example.
Musk had previously planned to use a suite of space vehicles to support
the colonization of Mars, beginning with an unmanned capsule called Red
Dragon in 2018, but he said SpaceX is now focused on a single, slimmer
and shorter rocket instead.
The rocket would be partially reusable and capable of flight directly
from Earth to Mars, could still carry 100 passengers, and could also be
used for fast transport on Earth, Musk said.
Musk's SpaceX is one of several ventures that have said they want to
open up space routes to Mars.
Lockheed Martin Corp announced separate plans for a manned Mars journey
on Friday, unveiling concept drawings of a "base camp" space station
orbiting Mars and landing craft that would carry four astronauts to the
planet's surface.
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Elon Musk, founder and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) and lead
designer of SpaceX, and also CEO and co-founder of Tesla, reacts as
a screen displays a depiction of a human colony on the planet Mars
during a presentation at the International Astronautical Congress
(IAC) in Adelaide, Australia, September 29, 2017. AAP/Morgan
Sette/via REUTERS
"We know its cold, it's pretty inhospitable, so we start with the
robots and then we go down with these landers," Rob Chambers,
Lockheed's director of human space flight strategy, told Australian
Broadcasting Corporation in an interview.
Chambers gave no date, but the planned mission would be a joint
expedition with NASA, which aims to reach Mars during the 2030s.
Mars is typically 140 million miles (225 million km) from Earth, and
landing the first humans there, after what traditionally has been
seen as a six- to nine-month journey, is an extremely ambitious
goal.
SpaceX, which Musk founded with the aim of colonizing Mars, is one
of several private and government-funded ventures vying to put
people and cargo on the red planet, and other destinations beyond
Earth's orbit.
Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin space venture is also
designing a heavy-lift vehicle called New Armstrong that will be
capable of Mars transport.
Russia and China are each preparing for manned missions to the moon,
and Russia has agreed to work with NASA planning a "deep space
gateway" space station in lunar orbit, which would serve as a
staging post for future missions.
(Reporting by Sonali Paul and Tom Westbrook; Editing by Clarence
Fernandez and Jonathan Oatis)
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