Jeanne Maciel
Small Business Owner, Volunteer, and Dancer in Boise
A British Spaceport Will Initiates a New Space Tourism Market
The British spaceports at Lowell and Craighead come with a lot of history. The spaceports were first used by the British in the early twenty-first century. Although they do not seem to still be in use, they were a vital part of the British Empire. For many years these spaceports were part of the Scotland home counties. Also, the prestwick spaceport has become increasingly famous, which increasingly launches rockets and satellites into space. It can definitely be argued that the space industry in the UK is developing rapidly.
The reason for the British spaceport at Craighead is that this area has some of the highest mountains in the whole world. It is also close to the Indian Ocean and the Atlantic Ocean. A landing on the Indian Ocean will allow the astronauts to use their spaceflight equipment from reusable capsules. A landing on the Atlantic Ocean will allow the astronauts to go into orbit to research the ocean currents and learn more about the moon and other celestial bodies.
There are two different ways that the British spaceport will be useful. The spaceports will be useful for launching an experimental satellite called the Skylab-ATV. This satellite will be the first of its kind and it will be helping NASA learn more about how an actual satellite works in our atmosphere. It will also help pave the way for a new space industry. That industry will be devoted to using skylark-l rocket motor vehicles to launch small satellites into low earth orbit.
When the British spaceport is no longer needed, then that is when the aircraft will start taking off from the Scottish spaceport. It will be carrying with it six unmanned aerial vehicles. These aircraft will be exploring different types of terrain. Some of the other equipment that will be carrying with them include a robotic explorer and a radio signaling laboratory. This whole array will be helping explorers to find new places in the wilderness that we do not yet know to be living in.