RIP Starship MK1 and WHY SpaceX is disruptive in the Space Industry | TIS#173 - a podcast by Alex G. Orphanos, Science Communicator
from 2019-11-23T19:22:37
On this episode, which I have recorded for a third time, covers the latest on SpaceX's Starship testing as well as some news on the costs of the Commercial Crew Program for NASA's options on sending humans into space again, without the aid of Russia and their Soyuz capsule (which costs $87 million per Astronaut).
I also talk about my thoughts on WHY SpaceX is so disruptive in the Space Industry and how they make it possible to be immune to the ever-changing winds of government funding and political parties in charge.
I have recorded this multiple times because so much happened on the same day of recording, we just had to scrap it and start over. With Thanksgiving coming up next week, we've got a longer episode to help tide you over until December, when I will be in Florida capturing the CRS-19 mission for SpaceX thanks to the NASAsocial program.
Enjoy your holiday America! Stay safe everyone - we'll see you in December!
If you'd like to learn more about the history of the Space Program get these two books! I've read both and highly recommend them. Here are some affiliate links for them - and we get a small portion from Amazon when you buy and it helps support the podcast.
Chasing the Moon by Robert Stone and Alan Andres
https://amzn.to/2L318l1
Failure is not an Option - by Gene Kranz
https://amzn.to/33dcYPu
Reference Links from this week's episode:
Live footage of Starship MK1 failure courtesy of LabPadre
https://twitter.com/LabPadre/status/1197278770203373569
Multiple Starships created to do A-B testing
https://arstechnica.com/science/2019/05/spacex-plans-to-ab-test-its-starship-rocketship-builds/
NASA IG report for concerns and costs of commercial crew program
https://oig.nasa.gov/docs/IG-20-005.pdf
Elon Sending tweet from operational prototype starlink
https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1186523464712146944
How many more satellites is SpaceX planning to use vs what they originally said
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/11/science/spacex-starlink-satellites.html
https://techcrunch.com/2019/10/24/spacex-intends-to-offer-starlink-satellite-broadband-service-starting-in-2020/
Jack Beyers(twitter) capture of the train of starlink satellites when sun still catches them before sunset
https://twitter.com/thejackbeyer/status/1194078953108987904
AMOS-6 Anomaly - TIS#097
http://www.todayinspace.net/podcast/anomaly-slc-40-falcon9-spacex-amos6-dna-space-philae?rq=TIS%23097
SpaceX & Boeing make Progress, Voyager 2's Interstellar Research | TIS#171
http://www.todayinspace.net/podcast/spacex-amp-boeing-make-progress-voyager-2s-interstellar-research-tis171/2019/11/7?rq=TIS%23171
dearMoon, SpaceX, and the BFR | Orbital News | Today In Space podcast
https://youtu.be/EpYjUw0c6QA
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Further podcasts by Alex G. Orphanos, Science Communicator
Website of Alex G. Orphanos, Science Communicator