FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
30 AUG 00
SAN DIEGO, CA, USA
TransOrbital Inks Historic First Commercial Data Purchase Agreement From
Private Moonshot
TransOrbital, Inc. and the Foundation for the International Non-government
Development of Space (FINDS) have reached a historic agreement, lighting
the way for government and commercial data purchases in space. The two
organizations have agreed to test the Global Positioning Satellite (GPS)
constellation at lunar distances to learn if it is possible to utilize GPS
for navigation during a lunar trajectory or in lunar orbit.
FINDS, a not-for-profit private endowment that funds leading edge space
research, is pre-paying for rights to license patents or processes that may
ensue from TransOrbital's GPS experiment. FINDS, whose goal is to prove
the viability of data purchase as a means of facilitating the participation
of commercial firms in space exploration, intends to release the data to
the public domain, enabling others to review and test the experiment team's
conclusions. "The current cost of space exploration is too high. FINDS
believes by demonstrating that data purchase works, the cost to taxpayers
can be greatly reduced and we can catalyze a whole new private space
exploration industry" says Rick Tumlinson, Executive Director of FINDS.
TransOrbital's 2001 TrailBlazer spacecraft will be equipped to detect the
weak GPS signals while in lunar orbit. The team will test the GPS
constellation while enroute to the moon and while in lunar orbit.
TransOrbital will then analyze the experimental data for the suitability
of GPS navigation for future lunar missions. If GPS can be proved to be
usable at distances as far away as the moon, it will enable a low cost
solution for spacecraft navigation to the Moon and in lunar orbit. The
2001 TrailBlazer spacecraft will not rely upon GPS data for its navigation
at the moon, but instead will use established means of navigation.
TransOrbital's private, robotic 2001 TrailBlazer's prime mission is to
return HDTV video from lunar orbit for use as commercial products. The
privately held company is conducting the 2001 TrailBlazer Project as a
for-profit Space Venture and will produce various video and other products
such as:
Earthrise 2001: Video of the Earth rising over the lunar horizon as seen
from lunar orbit.
Low-altitude, high-speed surface video, suitable for inclusion in a 1st run
science-fiction movie.
A photographic Atlas of the entire lunar surface for the public,
universities, and planetary scientists.
High-resolution aerial photography of pre-targeted sites.
Advertisers' inflatable sub-spacecraft with logos.
Interactive Lunar Flight CD-ROM game.
Final de-orbit video, up to moment of impact.
Personalized Internet postcards from the moon.
"We want to do for the Moon what Jacques Cousteau did for marine
exploration - to go, look, sell the images and repeat it again and again."
TransOrbital will also provide small cargo delivery service for personal
memorabilia & business cards to the lunar surface.
TransOrbital continues to seek additional customers for the 2001
TrailBlazer project and will present the project at Space Frontier
Conference 9; Oct. 19-22, 2000 in Los Angeles, CA at the Manhattan Beach
Marriott.
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