Once again, all together now;
Happy birthday to you!
Happy birthday to you!
Happy birthday dear Space Elevator Blog!
Happy birthday to you!
Four years ago yesterday, I started this blog. It’s been yet another exciting year. In keeping with my tradition of writing an ‘anniversary post’ (first year summary, second year summary and third year summary), the following is a list of, IMHO, the more significant happenings in the past 12 months that I was privileged to cover:
The Space Elevator Games has a winner! After several years of ever-increasing competition requirements and competitor sophistication, The Spaceward Foundation and NASA awarded Team LaserMotive the very cool prize sum of $900,000. This was for their >2meter/second run (which they did multiple times) in the 2009 Climber / Power-Beaming competition in the Space Elevator Games. Coverage of these Games was extensive, both via the Internet, including uStream (which I was privileged to moderate along with Bryan Laubscher) and in the conventional media. Kudo’s must also be given to the other two competitors in this competition, the Kansas City Space Pirates and USST. Both of these teams have proved they’re very capable and I fully expect them to compete for the $1.1 Million dollars in prize money still available. Plans for the 2010 Climber / Power-Beaming competition continue apace and will be announced here and at the official site of the Space Elevator Games when finalized. In the Strong Tether Competition (the other half of the Space Elevator Games), a team from Japan brought the second, ever, carbon nanotube tether to the competition. Though this tether was not strong enough to win a prize, it is a portent of things to come. This year’s Strong Tether competition will be held, again, at the upcoming Space Elevator Conference (August 13-15) in Redmond, Washington.
ISEC becomes a real organization. After spending some time ‘finding our way’, the International Space Elevator Consortium (ISEC) finally emerged as a real force in the Space Elevator community. I am privileged to be the President of this group and it is a real joy to be able to work with many of the movers and shakers in the Space Elevator effort. We’ve adopted our first Strategic Plan and are in the process of making it happen. Each year, we will adopt a space elevator-related topic as our theme for that year and focus our activities around it. This year it is Space Debris Mitigation. We have a ‘red team’ headed up by ISEC Director Peter Swan preparing a paper on this topic. The Pearson prize will be awarded for the best paper presented this year on this topic. This topic will be a theme at the Space Elevator Conference. The ISEC Journal will also adopt this as a theme. We have a Library Project underway, whereby we will create a central repository / search engine for the major papers and studies on this topic. And finally, the ISEC Poster for 2010 will have Space Debris Mitigation as its theme.
Artsutanov and Pearson prizes announced. I am particularly thrilled with this development. Yuri Artsutanov and Jerome Pearson are two of the co-inventors of the modern-day thinking about Space Elevator design and operation. ISEC is honoring these two innovators with prizes named after them. The Pearson prize is $1,500 and will be awarded to that individual who submits the best paper on our 2010 theme; Space Debris Mitigation. The Artsutanov prize is $2,500 and will be awarded to that individual who submits the best paper on any other Space Elevator related topic. In addition, ISEC will invite these prize winners to the 2010 Space Elevator Conference to present their winning papers and receive their winnings. ISEC will cover travel and lodging expenses for the winners. Abstracts are beginning to come in and it looks like we’re going to have some very interesting papers created. The deadline for abstract submission is May 15th and details for these prizes can be found on the ISEC website.
Japan – The Japan Space Elevator Association (JSEA) sponsored the first Asian Space Elevator Competition in August of 2009. The winning team was from Germany. In addition, JSEA, sponsored two Space Elevator competitions (LASER ’09 and LASER ’10) aimed at getting school children interested in the concept of a Space Elevator. Finally, JSEA held its second annual Space Elevator Conference in December of 2009. This is a very active group and we expect great things from them in the future.
EuroSpaceward Conference – I was able to attend the 2009 EuroSpaceward Conference (held in Luxembourg in December) and was privileged to be able to make a presentation on ISEC and our future plans. This is the third year in a row that EuroSpaceward has hosted this conference, but it’s the first time I’ve been able to attend. The conference was excellent; very informative and a lot of fun to be at. They’ve just announced their fourth annual conference for Dec 4-5 of this year. Markus Klettner heads up this organization and it, too, is very active in the Space Elevator effort.
The 2009 Space Elevator Conference. This was the second year in a row that the conference was held at the Microsoft Conference center in Redmond, Washington and I’m very pleased to say that they will host the 2010 conference again this year (August 13-15). The Conference facilities are outstanding and contributed to a most-excellent conference this past year. With all of the ISEC activities we have planned for this year at the conference and, with the Strong Tether competition again being held at the conference, I think this year’s conference will be the best ever.
The Elevator2Space series debuted in 2009 and published a series of 26 episodes. All of them are funny – it’s difficult to pick a favorite (though I really liked this one and this one and this one). You can view all of the episodes on their website. Very, very creative.
Other highlights include seeing Designs for a Space Elevator Base Station, honoring the 40th Anniversary of the first moon landing, the publishing of Space Tethers and Space Elevators and, of course, celebrating the announcement of the world’s first space elevator.
I’ve also enjoyed watching the traffic at this site continuing to grow. This Space Elevator Blog has recorded well over 288,000 hits since we’ve begun and we’ve been visited by people from 185 different countries! That’s not all of them, but we’re getting close ?
I also have to mention, again, the fun I had working with Ben Shelef of the Spaceward Foundation and the people at NASA (especially John Kelly and Andy Petro) in the planning and testing leading up to the Climber / Power-Beaming half of the Space Elevator Games. As most of you know, this competition was held at the NASA Dryden Flight Research Center. This is located inside of Edwards Air Force base in the Mojave desert in California. It is one of the most Über-cool things I’ve ever been involved in. I put up several posts about this (a couple are here and here), but just have to mention it again – it was unbelievably awesome!
Finally, this past year was special to me on a personal note; I welcomed my first grandchild and I turned 60. I’m now, officially, getting old…
What will the next 12 months bring? We have the Space Elevator Games (American and Japanese) to look forward to. We have Space Elevator Conferences (American and European) to look forward to. ISEC will continue to coordinate efforts in the Space Elevator arena. And I’m sure we’ll be surprised by other activities in the Space Elevator effort.
If you want to get involved, join ISEC! We are helping to push this magnificent concept forward, but we can only go as far as our member donations let us. We need you – we need your membership donations – we need your enthusiasm and ideas.
Stay tuned!
Truly, a lot has happend the past year. Happy Birthday!
congrats buddy
heres to another 4 brilliant years (at least I hope) of your space elevator journalism – this site is always in my favourites list!
Ted, last but not least kudos to you also from EuroSpaceward for all the efforts on the space elevator outreach you have untertaken the past 4 years in order to push the frontier! Congrats on your anniversary and many thanks!
Space elevators are a great concept; as we expand into the solar system, they will be much needed to launch matrials out of gravity wells. I find it exciting to have people of our current time bringing this idea to life. Personally, I would think that it would only be built once we have otherworldly resources. I am very glad to have found this.