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WELCOME TO ESIL-06! FAA Center of Excellence for Commercial Space Transportation Emerging Commercial Space Industry Leaders Workshop. Ken Davidian, FAA AST Director of Research COE CST ESIL-06 Workshop, Stanford, CA May 29, 2014. Overview. Introductions Schedule ESIL Background
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WELCOME TO ESIL-06! FAA Center of Excellence for Commercial Space Transportation Emerging Commercial Space Industry Leaders Workshop Ken Davidian, FAA AST Director of ResearchCOE CST ESIL-06 Workshop, Stanford, CA May 29, 2014
Overview • Introductions • Schedule • ESIL Background • Approach • Industry Segment • Action!
Introductions • Name • Career Background (School/Company) • Interests/Goals • Experience with commercial space
ESIL Workshops • Emerging Space Industry Leaders Workshop series • Objectives: • Inform – perspective, background, context • Perform – group analysis • Network – internal and external to industry • Impact: • 62 participants and counting • 2 publications complete (1 in progress)
ESIL-01 – October 2011 • 26 participants • Industry segments: - Point-to-point - Lunar Mining - Hosted Payloads • Guest Contributors - Dennis Stone (NASA JSC) - Max Vozoffmv2space - Diane DimeffeSpace
ESIL-02 – March 2012 • 12 Participants • Industry focus: - Government role in commercial space • Guest contributors • Richard Dunn – DoDAcq. • Chris Shank – dCoS L. Smith • Alan Ladwig – NASA HQ • James Finch – OSD • Jim Van Laak – FAA AST • Clay Mowry - Arianespace
ESIL-03 – November 2012 • 10 Participants • Industry focus: Commercial human spaceflight training • Guest Contributor: BriennaHenwood
ESIL-04 – June 2013 • 14 Participants • Industry focus: • Microgravity utilization • Guest contributors: • SirishaBandlaCSF • Cassie KloberdanzSNC • Dan DurdaSwRI • Khaki RodwayXCOR
Other Events • ESIL-05: Tempe Arizona - November 6th-7th • Topic: Small spacecraft transportation to orbit (as hosted payload, secondary payload, or dedicated launch) • ESIL-06: Stanford, CA - Comm’l Remote Sensing • ESIL-07: Washington, DC • Other Activities (logistics, speakers, lanyards) • SpaceVision Conference (2011 & 2012) • Space Gen Fusion Forum (2012 & 2013)
AST’s Dual Mission Goals Source: TITLE 51 US CODE SUBTITLE V, CH. 509 • Regulate the commercial space transportation industry, only to the extent necessary, to ensure compliance with international obligations of the United States and to protect the public health and safety, safety of property, and national security and foreign policy interest of the United States. • Encourage, facilitate, and promote commercial space launches and re-entries by the private sector.
AST Statutory Mission ELV Air Launch Launch & Reentry Sites RLV Launch & Reentry Sea Launch Human Space Flight
Licensing / Permitting Process FlowAST Reviews, Approvals, and Determinations Policy Review Payload Review Financial Responsibility Determination License or Permit Application Submittal Environmental Review Safety Review
Center of Excellence for Commercial Space Transportation What: A 10-year partnership of academia, industry, and government to create a world-class consortium. August 2010 - August 2020 3 Goals: Research, Training, Outreach/STEM Purpose: Improve National Competitiveness… through the development of advanced, specialized human, physical, and knowledge resources to address commercial space industry challenges. Origins: Openly-competed and selected by the FAA Administrator. Matching Requirement: 1:1 for All USG Funds Created by the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990, Public Law 101-508, Title IX, Aviation Safety and Capacity Expansion Act.
COE CST Research Areas & Tasks 4. Space Transportation Industry Viability 1. Space Traffic Management & Operations 2. Space Transportation Ops, Technologies & Payloads 2.1 Ground System & Ops Safety Techs 1.1 Orbital 1.2 Suborbital 2.2 Vehicle Safety Analyses SAFETY SAFETY 1.3 NAS Integration 2.3 Vehicle Safety Systems & Techs 1.4 Spaceport Operations 1.5 Integrated Air/Space Traffic Management 2.4 Payload Safety 2.5 Vehicle Ops Safety 3. Human Spaceflight 3.1 Aerospace Physiology & Medicine 4.1 Markets SAFETY 3.2 Personnel Training EFP 4.2 Policy 3.3 ECLSS 4.3 Law 3.4 Habitability & Human Factors 4.4 Regulation 4.5 Cross-Cutting Topics 3.5 Human Rating
FAA Center of Excellence for Commercial Space Transportation
COE CST Year 3 Supporters Locked On Inc. Paris Surgical Assoc. Bachner Consultants Inc. Digital Solutions Marketing Consultant Spaceport America Consultants NM Space Development Foundation
For More Information… FAA AST Annual Compendium ofCommercial SpaceTransportation:2013 COE CST Web Site Blogs & Wikis Florida Space RePortby Eddie Ellegood ParabolicArc.comby Douglas Messier Commercial Space Wiki bit.ly/ASTComp2013 www.coe-cst.org
Up Next:An Extremely Brief Intro to theCommercial Space Industry & Commercial Remote Sensing
Commercial Space: Defined Defined by U.S. National Space Policy: “refers to space goods, services, or activities provided by private sector enterprises that bear a reasonable portion of the investment risk and responsibility for the activity, operate in accordance with typical market-based incentives for controlling cost and optimizing return on investment, and have the legal capacity to offer these goods or services to existing or potential nongovernmental customers.” National Space Policy of the United States of America, June 28, 2010
Commercial Scope • Communications = established • Navigation = established • Remote Sensing = established • Launch = established • Manufacturing = established • Suborbital = emerging • Cargo = emerging • Crew = emerging • Interplanetary = emerging
Communications: Context Source: The Space Report 2011
Remote Sensing: Context Source: The Space Report 2011
Remote Sensing: History • August 1959 – Explorer-6: First space photograph of the Earth • 1960 – 1997: Remote sensing data provided by civil/military satellites (i.e. Landsat) • 1984 – Congress Authorizes NOAA to look for commercial operator of Landsats • 1992 – US Congress permits private remote sensing systems • 1997 – 1st Commercial Space Venture (EarlyBird -1) http://www.isprs.org/publications/highlights/highlights0402/fritz.html
Workshop Group Session Objectives • Session #1: • Divide into groups. Get familiar with what info is needed for each group. • Session #2 • Begin discussing content within each group. • Session #3 • Cross-group interactions. • Continue content research within each group. • Initial presentation prep. • Session #4 • Finalize content and presentations.
Two Panel Discussions • Day 1: Emerging CRS - The Real Thing • Dan Birkenstock (Skybox) • Dan Lopez (Urthecast) • Art Anisimov (Dauria) • Day 2: Economic Perspective Roundtable • Ward Hanson (SIEPR) • Alex MacDonald (NASA HQ/ARC) • Greg Autry (USC/UC I) • Bruce Pittman (NASA Space Portal)
Workshop Deliverables • ESIL Workshop Deliverables • Evaluate industry segment using value net. • Outline key areas for win-win partnerships. • Assemble/document group analysis. • Post-Workshop Deliverables • Refine post-workshop as needed. • Prepare publication/presentation for industry conference.
Action! • Questions on task? • Identify approach • Participant directed • Sub-divide and conquer? • Outline workshop product format • i.e. PowerPoint presentation, document, other? • Use to identify required deliverables • Work smart, play hard!
Up Next:A Short Break, and then…Introduction to Game Theory PARTS Analysis