You don't have to climb aboard a rocket ship to be a space
tourist anymore.
For $75,000, a company called World View Enterprises will
loft you 19 miles (30 kilometers) up into Earth's atmosphere using
a high-altitude balloon. While the gentle ride won't earn passengers their
astronaut wings — outer space is generally considered to begin at an altitude
of 62 miles (100 km) — it will afford spectacular views of the blackness of space
and the curvature of our planet, World View officials say.
"Seeing the Earth hanging in the ink-black void of
space will help people realize our connection to our home planet and to the
universe around us, and will surely offer a transformative experience to our
customers," World View CEO Jane Poynter said in a statement. [See a video
animation of the balloon ride]
"It is also our goal to open up a whole new realm for
exercising human curiosity, scientific research and education," she
added. "We look forward to pioneering this new, accessible and
affordable spaceflight regime, and to sharing the breathtaking,
once-in-a-lifetime experience with people from around the globe."
World View's
balloon ride, which will let customers glide for about two hours at
maximum altitude, is a departure from the other options available to would-be space tourists at the
moment.
For example, Virgin Galactic and XCOR Aerospace are both
offering brief suborbital flights to an altitude of about 62 miles aboard
rocket-powered space planes. In both cases, passengers will get a few minutes
of weightlessness along with the great view.
Virgin Galactic is charging $250,000 per seat aboard its
six-passenger SpaceShipTwo,
while a ride on XCOR's one-passenger Lynx vehicle costs $95,000. Neither
spaceship is fully operational at the moment, though both could be flying
customers in the next year or so, officials with each company have said.
Passengers on World View balloon flights will ride inside a
capsule designed by Paragon Space Development Corp., which is also aiding two
private Mars efforts — the Inspiration Mars mission to send two astronauts on a
Red Planet flyby in 2018 and Mars One, a project that aims to land four people
on the Red Planet in 2023 as the vanguard of a permanent colony.
Paragon has already begun testing capsule components and
will soon start demonstrating the flight capabilities of the entire system,
World View officials said.
Poynter is a co-founder of Paragon, as is World View chief
technology officer Taber MacCallum. World View's head scientist is former NASA
science chief Alan Stern, who also leads the agency's New Horizons mission to
Pluto.
The Federal Aviation Administration recently concluded that
World View's spacecraft and operations fall under the jurisdiction of the
office of Commercial Space Flight, company officials said.
0 comments:
Post a Comment