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Businesses Space News

New Zealand To Launch First Private Space Rocket 96

RobGoldsmith sends in a Space Fellowship piece (which seems to be a press release) about New Zealand's entry into the space age. "Private New Zealand aerospace company Rocket Lab completed its final ground-based test today and is now ready to launch New Zealand into the space race with its Atea-1 launch vehicle. The first high-altitude launch of Atea-1 is scheduled for the end of November this year. Once Atea-1 has successfully concluded the development phase it will be the first privately built rocket launched from the Southern Hemisphere to enter space. The article features a new CGI movie on the launch."
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New Zealand To Launch First Private Space Rocket

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  • by MichaelSmith ( 789609 ) on Tuesday November 17, 2009 @06:18AM (#30127264) Homepage Journal

    They fire them from Woomera (ie, in the southern hemisphere) all the time.

  • Great Mercury Island (Score:2, Informative)

    by FlightlessParrot ( 1217192 ) on Tuesday November 17, 2009 @07:28AM (#30127536)
    Great Mercury Island is actually off the East Coast of the North Island, about the same latitude as Auckland. I expect they've designed it so it will work in the rain.
  • by marc_the_kiwi ( 1680284 ) on Tuesday November 17, 2009 @08:57AM (#30127852)

    If it's truly private, Rocket Lab should get all credit, not New Zealand.

    If you were a born and bred New Zealander as I am you would realise that the people behind this are the same. Ask anyone from NZ what they are, and I guarantee you they're a kiwi ahead of all other things.
    Reading the article it is quite clearly a kiwi invention. It is being tested with the help of Air New Zealand (partly government owned), it focuses on creating environmental aspects of their design (I can't think of anything more kiwiana) and imho embodies the 'No 8 wire' attitude.
    (for those who don't know, No 8 wire is an icon in NZ. A flexible wire used on the farm to fix just about anything).

    Many many things can be attributed to New Zealanders and their ingenuity, despite it being one of the youngest countries in the world.
    1884 Air Tight Tin Lid - John Eustace
    An air tight tin lid with a lip. Although others copied the idea, he was making 100 tonnes of tin cans a year in the 1920s.
    1982 Baeyertz Tape - Dr John Baeyertz
    Use for accurately estimating birth dates, still used world-wide today.
    1988 Bungy - AJ Hackett
    The world's first commercial bungy site was opened in 1988. In June 1987 AJ bungy jumped illegally from the Eiffel Tower.
    1956 Disposable Hypodermic Syringe - Colin Murdoch
    A disposable, pre-filled syringe.
    1900 Eggbeater - Ernest Godward
    An egg-beater that could prepare eggs for a sponge cake in three and a half minutes, previously it took 15
    1944 Jogging - Arthur Lydiard
    A training technique that saw his two protégés Peter Snell and Murray Halberg win gold medals on the same day at the 1960 Rome Olympics.
    1953 Propellerless Jet Boat - William Hamilton
    The world's first propellerless jet boat
    1901 Spiral Hair Pin - Ernest Godward
    This was a predecessor of the hair clip.
    1919 Split the Atom - Sir Ernest Rutherford
    The first in the world to in 1919. He was awarded a Nobel Prize for his efforts in radioactivity.
    1970s Spreadable Butter - New Zealand Dairy Research Institute
    After years of development, the New Zealand Dairy Research Institute released the worlds first spreadable butter in 1991, which was then made by New Zealand dairy co-operatives and now by Fonterra.
    1950s Tranquilliser Gun - Colin Murdoch
    A tranquilliser gun, also called a capture gun or dart gun, is a non-lethal gun which shoots tranquilliser darts filled with tranquilliser that, when injected, make the target animal sleep.
    1972 Tullen Snips - John Hough
    Scissors which could cut items as tough as one cent coins and by the 1980s more than 20 million had been made.
    1884 Whistle in Sport - William Atack
    The world's first referee to use a whistle to stop a game of sport.
    1994 Zorb - Dwayne van der Sluis and Andrew Akers
    Created the world's first Zorb, a unique adventure activity involving a giant plastic ball, a slope and speeds of up to 50 kilometres per hour.

  • Re:xena connection (Score:5, Informative)

    by confused one ( 671304 ) on Tuesday November 17, 2009 @09:49AM (#30128184)
    The dwarf planet you refer to is officially named Eris.

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