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Small fly: Garvey Spacecraft Corp. wants to meet the need for cheaper satellite launches.


AS demand for access to space continues to grow, the satellites seem to be shrinking--and a little Long Beach company is looking to capitalize.

Tucked away on the California State University Enrollment
 of Long Beach's campus is Garvey Spacecraft Corp. John Garvey started the 6-year old company after more than 20 years in the aerospace and rocket business. His goal is to make a reliable, reusable and affordable launch vehicle for ultra-small satellites, those weighing around 20 pounds. Who would have use for such a small satellite?

"Everyone from the military to academia to private companies would be very interested in putting up a proprietary satellite, if it was feasible and fast," said Marco Caceres, a senior space analyst for Fairfax, Va.-based Teal Group Corp. "The demand is there, but the price isn't where it needs to be yet."

A handful of companies have emerged over the past five years attempting to crack into the blossoming satellite business. Most, like El Segundo-based Space Exploration Technologies, which was started in 2002 by PayPal founder Elon Musk Elon Musk (born 28 June 1971) is an entrepreneur and founder of PayPal and SpaceX. He is chairman of Tesla Motors and SolarCity. Early life
Musk was born and grew up in South Africa, the son of a South African engineer and a Canadian-born mother[]
, focus on medium-sized cargo payloads. Those are payloads between 1,000 and 8,000 pounds.

"The demand is there for the medium-sized satellites right now," Caceres said. "But why not make the satellite smaller instead of the rocket bigger?"

Since the U.S. launched its first satellite in the late '50s, the prevailing theory has been the bigger the rocket, the better its chances of getting a payload (1) Refers to the "actual data" in a packet or file minus all headers attached for transport and minus all descriptive meta-data. In a network packet, headers are appended to the payload for transport and then discarded at their destination.  into space. As a result, rockets have been. big and heavy, and there was line incentive to shrink satellites. Today, satellites weigh up to 10,000 pounds.

"The rockets we use today to launch satellites have changed very little since the '60s and '70s," Garvey said.

Because the rockets are big, the price is big, too. Rockets designed to put 10,000 pound satellites in orbit will cost a prospective customer between $50 million and $100 million. But if a customer wants to launch a satellite that weighs, say, 100 pounds, the customer can piggyback piggyback

1. A broker trading in his or her personal account after trading in the same security for a customer. The broker may believe the customer has access to privileged information that will cause the transaction to be profitable.

2.
 with other satellites, but then the customer is dependent on others' schedules and the prices is still high.

This is where Garvey's strategy begins. Garvey and his partner, Eric Besnard, an aerospace engineering professor at Cal State Long Beach, see big savings in their small rockets Small Rockets is a small computer game developer founded in 2000 that creates and sells PC computer games online. History
Small Rockets was born from the ashes of Fiendish Games, a department of Criterion Games, that was started to test the waters for delivering games
.

Garvey's price point for launching nanosatellites sits between $500,000 and $1 million--relatively low given that the next nearest competitor is Space X, which charges nearly $7 million for the smallest rocket.

Balsa wood Noun 1. balsa wood - strong lightweight wood of the balsa tree used especially for floats
balsa

Ochroma lagopus, balsa - forest tree of lowland Central America having a strong very light wood; used for making floats and rafts and in crafts
 

To help make their rockets more portable and less expensive, Garvey and Besnard make their rocket frames out of aluminum, balsa wood and fiberglass and use engineering students from the college to help assemble and test the rockets.

Sitting in the middle of their lab is Prospector VII--a 23-foot model that in April was successfully launched one mile into the air and recovered without event in the Mojave Desert Mojave or Mohave Desert, c.15,000 sq mi (38,850 sq km), region of low, barren mountains and flat valleys, 2,000 to 5,000 ft (610–1,524 m) high, S Calif.; part of the Great Basin of the United States. .

"Our rocket fits in the back of an SUV and takes less than a day to set up," Garvey said. "Plus, it weighs less than 250 pounds. It's very practical."

However, those are only test rockets Noun 1. test rocket - a rocket fired for test purposes
research rocket, test instrument vehicle

rocket, projectile - any vehicle self-propelled by a rocket engine
. He needs to develop bigger rockets that can launch payloads into space.

United Kingdom-based Surrey Satellite Technology LTD Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd, or SSTL, is a spin-off company of the University of Surrey that builds and operates small satellites. Its satellites began as amateur radio satellites known by the UoSAT (University of Surrey SATELLITE) name or by an OSCAR (Orbital Satellite , the world's largest manufacturer of nanosatellites, has already successfully launched more than two dozen satellites with payloads anywhere from the size of a shoebox shoe·box  
n.
1. An oblong box, usually made of cardboard, for holding a pair of shoes.

2. Something resembling or suggestive of such a box, as a plain, rectangular building or a cramped room or dwelling.

Noun 1.
 to the size of a small refrigerator.

Garvey Spacecraft has already received interest from the Air Force, which wants a quick-turnaround satellite

Garvey Spacecraft will launch its 14th test rocket this summer from the Mojave. Though he admits the company is still three or four years away from sending a satellite into orbit, Garvey said progress is being made.

"I look at where we are today and where we were when I started the company and I'm amazed a·maze  
v. a·mazed, a·maz·ing, a·maz·es

v.tr.
1. To affect with great wonder; astonish. See Synonyms at surprise.

2. Obsolete To bewilder; perplex.

v.intr.
. We're very close to a breakthrough."
COPYRIGHT 2006 CBJ, L.P.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:rocket launches of Garvey Spacecraft Corp.
Comment:Small fly: Garvey Spacecraft Corp. wants to meet the need for cheaper satellite launches.(rocket launches of Garvey Spacecraft Corp.)
Author:Roberts, Allen P., Jr.
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 29, 2006
Words:649
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