And thus the era of the Aeroplane came to a sudden end
(StevenR - for future reference cite Zepplins or the Concorde if you want to try and make a point)
Hardly, but look at all the regulation in place to fly any type of aircraft.
Hardly, but look at all the regulation in place to fly any type of aircraft.
Fairly common-sense stuff for the most part. Like requiring pilots to have a certain minimum amount of skill and experience before being licensed, no flight below 500 feet or within 2000 horizontal feet of an obstacle except during normal takeoff and landing, etc.
Hardly, but look at all the regulation in place to fly any type of aircraft.
Fairly common-sense stuff for the most part. Like requiring pilots to have a certain minimum amount of skill and experience before being licensed, no flight below 500 feet or within 2000 horizontal feet of an obstacle except during normal takeoff and landing, etc.
Show you evidence what will happen? That a spaceship will eventually be destroyed while in flight? See Soyuz 1, Shuttles Challenger and Columbia
Evidence that legislators are stupid and write up kneejerk legislation to look like they are doing "something" about the issue of the week? USA Patriot Act.
Evidence that things that go up sometimes don't land in their country of origin? Skylab.
Evidence that bureaucrats are petty and don't want to lose power? Pre-9/11 CIA and FBI not sharing information with other agencies. You can also look at the ATF worried about losing funding and staging the raid on the Branch Davidians for an infomercial to show Congress why they should still exist.
Or evidence of special interests buying off legislators with campaign contributions? I can give you 535 names on Capitol Hill and one in the White House.
That's already happened more than a dozen times in the past twenty years, mainly in China and Russia. The few American launchers/satellites that have landed near populated areas wound up in places like Iran or Saudi Arabia (mainly spent Delta rocket stages) as the upper stages of those rockets wind up tumbling back to Earth after a single unstable orbit.And thus the era of the Aeroplane came to a sudden end
(StevenR - for future reference cite Zepplins or the Concorde if you want to try and make a point)
Hardly, but look at all the regulation in place to fly any type of aircraft. Now throw in the the handwringing politician who has to "do something" with kneejerk legislation in response to the thousands of hours of sensationalist news coverage sure to exist in the wake of SpaceBus 1 crashing into a city or PrivateProbe 1 exploding on take off and putting toxic fuel into the oceans.
That's already happened more than a dozen times in the past twenty years, mainly in China and Russia. The few American launchers/satellites that have landed near populated areas wound up in places like Iran or Saudi Arabia (mainly spent Delta rocket stages) as the upper stages of those rockets wind up tumbling back to Earth after a single unstable orbit.And thus the era of the Aeroplane came to a sudden end
(StevenR - for future reference cite Zepplins or the Concorde if you want to try and make a point)
Hardly, but look at all the regulation in place to fly any type of aircraft. Now throw in the the handwringing politician who has to "do something" with kneejerk legislation in response to the thousands of hours of sensationalist news coverage sure to exist in the wake of SpaceBus 1 crashing into a city or PrivateProbe 1 exploding on take off and putting toxic fuel into the oceans.
The reason it hasn't caused an international incident is because rocket launch companies pay fantastic amounts of money to the underwriters to cover exactly this kind of situation. When a rocket stage falls out of the sky and lands on some guy's house, the insurance adjusters show up within a couple of hours, buy him a new one and slice off a few pieces of the rocket for him to keep as a souvenir. Only once or twice has the spent rocket come down with enough power to cause deaths, when (IIRC) the upper stage of a Chinese rocket landed on a nearby town, destroying it completely.
It won't be a problem in America because we already have layers of regulation specifically designed to prevent that sort of thing from happening, and we have plenty of launch sites where that sort of incident is next to impossible. The only thing we'd really need to worry about is the incredible longshot scenario if a returning spacecraft veered wildly off course and crashed into a building or something, but in that case the big story would be a couple of dead astronauts, not the damage caused by the crash.
We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.