SFF Prizes Proposals
SFF Prizes Proposals
SFF Prizes Proposals
The format of this competition would be similar to the Ansari X-Prize. To win the prize, a
team would need to demonstrate a reusable VTVL vehicle, carrying one pilot and an
additional crew member (or ballast), achieving a suborbital trajectory reaching space
with a delta-vee representative of that required by a lunar lander.
The goal of the LLC II is to encourage the development of viable VTVL landers by
multiple companies. For this reason, and because VTVL suborbital vehicles are
arguably harder than the original X-Prize goal, a larger purse is recommended ($20-30
million). Second- and third-place prizes are also recommended.
This prize would encourage the development of low-cost spacesuits, which are vital to
the safety of the emerging suborbital spaceflight industry, and produce a new
generation of experienced spacesuit suppliers that NASA can turn to for the
development of more advanced exploration suits. An annual prize of $500,000 is
recommended. To avoid the problem of auditing books to determine the cost of a
spacesuit, the competition would instead measure the number of personnel-hours
needed to assembly a suit from standard, commercially available parts and materials.
(This is a realistic proxy because labor is the largest component in spacesuit costs.) The
first Low-Cost Spacesuit Prize would be awarded to the first team to build a working suit
in a time that meets a minimum qualifying mark set by the judges. After that, the prize
would be awarded annually to the team that beats the previous year's score and the
current year's competitors.
http://spacefrontier.org/ 1
"Ops Normal" -- The Suborbital Operability Competition
This competition follows directly in the footsteps of the Ansari X-Prize. In an annual
event lasting for at least 10 years, companies would compete in a NASA-sponsored
competition to demonstrate highly reliable, high-tempo suborbital spaceflight operations.
A $5 million annual prize would be awarded to the company that flies the largest
number of suborbital flights within a period of one week. A possible alternative prize
would be a one-year contract guaranteeing the government purchase of a large number
of flights for scientific or educational purposes.
2 http://spacefrontier.org/