Testing safety on roller coaster in sky

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http://www.cnn.com/2004/TECH/space/09/20/roller.spaceII/index.html

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(SPACE.com) -- Zero Gravity Corporation announced last week it would be
offering weightless flights to paying customers. Those who sign up for
the experience will be treated to several stomach-rolling climbs and
drops.=20

Although the planes used are slightly modified commercial planes, tests
have shown that they can manage the demanding maneuvers.

"It is definitely an unusual flight trajectory," said Peter Diamandis,
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Zero Gravity. "But it is not a
dangerous flight trajectory."

The flight path traces out a series of parabolas, strung together in a
wave-like pattern. At the crests, passengers experience zero gravity,
while, at the troughs, their weight nearly doubles.

Zero Gravity chose the Boeing 727 cargo plane to launch passengers
briefly into the air. Some changes were necessary, but for the most part
the weightless flights did not supersede the original design
specifications of the plane.

"There's more stress landing on a windy day than on one of these
parabolic flights," said Noah McMahon, spokesperson for Zero Gravity.

Unusual flight pattern

A trip on G-Force One, the company's primary plane, is a bit like a
roller coaster without the track or the safety harness. The aircraft
climbs with its nose pointed 45 degrees up. At 34,000 feet, it levels
off smoothly before diving down to 24,000 feet, with a maximum descent
angle of about 30 degrees.

Customers on G-Force One are offered about 15 of these up-and-down
cycles, each lasting about a minute. But not all of the peaks achieve
zero gravity. To acclimatize the passengers, some of the early parabolas
reduce gravity to mimic the feeling on Mars (1/3 of Earth's gravity) and
the moon (1/6 of Earth's gravity).

Flight operations will be conducted out of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, by
Amerijet International, Zero Gravity's partner. Currently G-Force One is
on a two-week tour of the country.

Others paved the way

Space and military agencies around the world have been flying parabolic
flights for 45 years apparently without incident -- besides an
occasional lost lunch.

Zero Gravity says that NASA alone has conducted more than 150,000
parabolas in training astronauts for space flight and conducting
research. Ron Howard was able to film some of the scenes for Apollo 13
on the so-called "Vomit Comet."

Different aircraft have been employed to simulate weightlessness. NASA
uses the KC-135, which is the military's version of the Boeing 707.

Zero Gravity looked at several possible aircraft, including the Boeing
707, 727, 737, and 757, as well as the DC-9. They settled on the Boeing
727-200, which is used extensively as a cargo carrier.

One reason for choosing this aircraft is its similarity in size to the
KC-135, but with a large cargo door that allows for easy alteration of
the interior. Other advantages were the availability of replacement
parts and the fact that the plane's design allowed for a smooth
parabola.

The Boeing 727 is certified to withstand the force of 2.5 g to negative
1g. A parabolic flight aboard G-Force One goes from 1.8g to 0 g, well
within the tolerances of the Boeing 727.

Still, the Federal Aviation Administration had to approve Amerijet
International to operate such flights for the general public. That
process, which included evaluations of subsystems and about 1,000
parabolas in test flights, took nearly two years.

"I think the main concern was with the aircraft frame," said Paul
Takemoto, an FAA spokesperson.

To determine the stresses that parabolic flight might impart on the
frame, strain gauges were implanted in G-Force One's outer shell.=20

The FAA did require that an enhanced hydraulic system be put on the
plane. This was to prevent air from getting in the lines during the
rapid changes in pressure, Diamandis said. They also stipulated that
inspections be done more often than for gravity-respecting aircraft.

"We follow more stringent guidelines than a normal commercial flight,"
McMahon said.

Exemptions

The FAA did allow for two exemptions in its first-ever approval for
weightless flight service on a commercial basis.

Generally, flights that involve pointing the nose above or below 30
degrees from horizontal are considered aerobatic and thereby require the
wearing of parachutes. But the FAA has permitted Amerijet and Zero
Gravity to fly the parabolic maneuvers without strapping parachutes on
all the passengers. Diamandis said this would not reduce the safety.

"You're flying at an altitude that you wouldn't be able to use a
parachute," Diamandis said. "The safest thing to do -- if there's a
problem -- is to come back and land, just like a regular flight would."

The other FAA exemption involved drop-down oxygen masks, which any plane
flying over 25,000 feet is required to have. G-Force One will have
oxygen masks below passenger seats, and in the separate floating area,
but the FAA did not require an automatic system.

The reason that the drop-downs are not necessary, said Diamandis, is
that there are seven crew members on a G-Force One flight looking after
27 passengers. In contrast, a flight attendant on a commercial airplane
can be responsible for as many as 50 passengers.

Asked whether these parabolic flights will be as safe as normal
commercial flights, Takemoto said, "If they operate within the
parameters that we set out, yes, they will be safe."

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