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Private craft sends video from orbit

Genesis 1 cameras track the sun — and stuff floating in zero-G

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First video from Genesis 1
July 18: Video clips from the orbiting Genesis 1 spacecraft show personal items floating inside the prototype space station, as well as an whirling exterior view of the sun, Earth and stars.

Bigelow Aerospace

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By Alan Boyle
Science editor
msnbc.com
updated 5:16 p.m. ET July 18, 2006

Alan Boyle
Science editor

E-mail
The company behind an inflatable space module that could serve as the prototype for future private-sector space stations has released its first video clips from orbit, showing a whirling view of the sun and Earth as well as a flurry of photos and other mementos floating within.

The video clips from Bigelow Aerospace's Genesis 1 spacecraft, released Monday, are not yet ready for prime time — but they provide a rough idea of what paying customers might see after the launch of Genesis 2, scheduled later this year. The Las Vegas company already is taking orders for flying mementos into orbit and capturing video records of them as they swirl in zero-gravity.

Genesis 1 was launched last Wednesday from a Russian military base, atop a converted Soviet-era intercontinental ballistic missile. After reaching a 344-mile-high (550-kilometer-high) orbit, the craft's supertough skin inflated to 8 feet (2.4 meters) in diameter, using a technology that was developed by NASA in the 1990s but then mothballed. Real-estate billionaire Robert Bigelow licensed the concept for commercial application.

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Bigelow plans to test successively larger inflatable prototypes in orbit, leading up to the deployment of a full-scale orbital modules with as much internal volume as a three-bedroom house (11,654 cubic feet, or 330 cubic meters) in the 2012-2015 time frame. Such modules could be used as the building blocks for orbital hotels, laboratories or even sports complexes, Bigelow has said.

The real-estate and hotel magnate says he has spent $75 million on the project so far, and intends to spend an additional $425 million to make the concept commercially viable.

‘Fly Your Stuff’
Along the way, Bigelow has been looking for commercial and scientific applications that could make use of the prototype modules. Bigelow's "Fly Your Stuff" program, due to begin with Genesis 2, would be the first money-making application.

The items that litter Genesis 1 came from Bigelow employees and visitors, and were flown gratis as a test. The personal items are being circulated through the interior by fans, and in a statement released Tuesday, Bigelow Aerospace said the fan operation had to be adjusted.

"The objects are not discernible due to excessive fan modulation," the statement said. "We are attempting to reduce the fan modulation in order to produce less convection for viewing. These continuously running fans will probably need to be put on a pulsed mode to create convection and keep the images in motion, preventing static equilibrium."

Steve Pellegrino, a spokesman for Bigelow Aerospace, told MSNBC.com that the resolution of the video clips should become sharper as well.

"We still will be getting higher bandwidth, and that will improve the resolution," Pellegrino said.


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