Custom Search

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Space tourism prices dropping...space tourism possible in next few months


It's unlikely that you've heard of PJ King, despite the fact that he's about to set himself apart from most humans who've ever walked the planet. In as soon as 18 months, King could be launching into space as a paying commercial space tourist.


King, a 41-year-old Irish businessman, is one of hundreds of travelers who've signed up and trained to be among the first paying passengers aboard Virgin Galactic's trips to suborbital space -- 62 miles above the Earth.

"One of the reasons I'm doing this is precisely because I want these things to be ordinary," King said. "Part of the problem with space travel is that it is special."

King believes the $200,000 he and other passengers pay for a seat on a Virgin Galactic spacecraft will help create a new future when "flights like this are happening every week, when lots of people go, and the cost has been massively reduced due to the economics of scale."


Prices are coming down, even before space tourism has started taking off.

Russia charges private travelers $40 million to ride on its Soyuz spacecraft and spend a few days aboard the international space station. For a much shorter journey, Virgin Galactic wants $200,000 for a flight to suborbital space. But Space Adventures advertises suborbital trips for about half that price: $102,000. King says he knows people who've taken out mortgages to buy their spacecraft tickets.

The plunging prices are opening doors to consumers which have been all but closed for half a century to everyone except "right stuff" supermen and superwomen with names like John Glenn, Neil Armstrong and Sally Ride.


"I believe in this," King said. "This is not a just a bunch of rich people going into space for fun."
About 360 paying passengers have signed up to be among Virgin Galactic's first travelers, CEO George Whitesides said. After the initial launches, he expects that number to grow to thousands and tens of thousands.

"That's a fundamental shift," he said. "A whole bunch of our major assumptions about space travel are undergoing a major shift."


This past year has seen important strides toward this shift. Washington licensed Jacksonville, Florida's Cecil Field as the nation's eighth non-government spaceport in January. New Mexico's Spaceport America, where Virgin Galactic plans to permanently base its space flights, completed a nearly 2-mile spacecraft runway this month.

Virgin Galactic test-flew its spacecraft Sunday.

A firm that arranges private space travel, Space Adventures, announced private partnerships this year with Boeing and Texas-based Armadillo Aerospace, a rocket development firm headed by John Carmack, the programmer-businessman behind the famed "Doom" video games.

Boeing: Come fly to space with us King recalls the exact moment when he decided he wanted to go. When he was a youth in Ireland's countryside, far from city streetlights, the Milky Way laid out a virtual welcome mat for him.


"I remember thinking how strange it was that after man had conquered the moon, we appeared to have given up afterwards," said King, who built and sold his Clockworks International software company during the booming 1990s. "I think a lot of people imagined there would have been more progress in terms of space flight."

Virgin Galactic plans for each traveler to undergo a three-day pre-flight launch preparation program immediately before each mission. But many who've signed up, including King, have undergone centrifuge training to experience in-flight stresses stronger than gravity, known as G-forces.

"At six Gs, talking is extremely difficult," King said. "It feels like you've got a weight on your chest and your head is stuck to the back of the seat."

King refers to himself and his Virgin Galactic colleagues as astronauts, a job title Col. Buzz Aldrin, the second man to walk on the moon, is quite familiar with.

"I don't think these space tourists should be called astronauts," Aldrin said. "That term was created by the U.S. military. My suggestions would be star-traveler or starflyer."

Aldrin says he hopes his high-profile activities like competing on TV's "Dancing with the Stars" and his new iPhone app will spur continued interest in space. "In general, the private companies are more efficient ... but I think the government has its hands full trying to do exploration."


Virgin Galactic owner Sir Richard Branson and a virtual hall of fame of other wealthy business figures have invested much of their vast fortunes in hopes of gaining a toe hold in commercial space. Budget Suites owner Robert Bigelow, PayPal co-founder Elon Musk and Amazon.com's Jeff Bezos are all developing their own space hardware for traveling to -- or living in -- Earth orbit.

Working with NASA, their companies are developing space stations, spaceplanes, rockets and capsules for space travelers. Many of these systems are expected to be operating and deployed within the next five years.
"This is a big deal, and the American people should be excited about it," said Charles Miller, NASA's senior adviser for commercial space. "If you get the Steve Jobs and Bill Gates and Sergey Brins of American entrepreneurs working on space travel for the American people in partnership with the U.S. government, that's a good thing, which is why it was done."


NASA's shift toward the privatization of space has been planned since the Reagan administration, Miller said, and it comes as the 30-year-old shuttle program is set to end next year.

Shuttle layoffs leave some workers adrift.

At the New Mexico spaceport, about 60 miles north of Las Cruces, workers are completing a combination traveler terminal and spacecraft hangar that looks right out of TV's "The Jetsons."

Tourists will gain access to the spaceport by boarding special buses at welcome centers in the nearby towns of Truth or Consequences and Hatch, said Rick Homans, the spaceport's executive director.


Plans call for facilities accommodating about a half-million annual visitors to be finished in 18 to 24 months, including a "second-to-none" restaurant, space exhibits and simulators that replicate G-forces and weightlessness, Homans said. Spaceport officials are considering offering flights for visitors to watch Virgin Galactic spacecraft blast into suborbit from 50,000 feet.

"We want them to be able to talk to inventors, rocket scientists, to see the spaceships and to witness the technology as much as possible," Homans said. Visitors may be able to launch model rockets or walk on terrain replicating the moon or Mars.

Could these developments in space tourism lead to more practical applications, like a successor to the defunct supersonic Concorde aircraft?

Space designers imagine a network of hypersonic spaceplanes that would take off from a runway in New Mexico and land at a Tokyo spaceport 45 minutes later.


Is point-to-point hypersonic travel around the globe possible in the near future?

"We're a long way from that," Miller said. "We could do it in a decade if there was a commitment to doing it, but it is not a priority for anybody I know in the U.S. government."


By Thom Patterson, CNN

54 comments:

  1. Very interesting. I'd sure love to be a passanger

    ReplyDelete
  2. i think i'ven't money for a trip in the space xD

    ReplyDelete
  3. wow, i was thinking of travelling to space to be honest, maybe when i have a little bit more money

    ReplyDelete
  4. cool but i wont be the first one going lol

    ReplyDelete
  5. The future is now, and I'm loving it. Seriously, reading about this stuff just makes me feel happy.

    ReplyDelete
  6. this is something i wouldnt be able to experience

    ReplyDelete
  7. It makes me happy this is happening..even happier to know the ship is named Enterprise. XD

    ReplyDelete
  8. I really hope this all comes off as a success, this is such an amazing opportunity for those that can afford it

    ReplyDelete
  9. coonl another cool thing only the rich can do woooooo

    ReplyDelete
  10. Damn, how long do you suppose there is the first commercial space death

    ReplyDelete
  11. Cool, and I didn't had idea that there were space trips, lol. I'd like to go to Mars! =)

    ReplyDelete
  12. branson rocks. shows that someone still has money in this economy

    ReplyDelete
  13. i wanna go into space so badly, damn the rich for being able to experiance this. grrrrrrrrrrr

    ReplyDelete
  14. sounds scary but very adventurous :D

    ReplyDelete
  15. damn I wanna go on one of those !

    ReplyDelete
  16. Well, there aren't any volcanoes that can spit out ash in space, so theyre pretty safe

    ReplyDelete
  17. the ships look pretty cool atleast... anything ever happen with that space elevator?

    ReplyDelete
  18. i'll definitely try this someday.

    ReplyDelete
  19. If I ever hit the lotto I'm gonna blow it all on space travel

    ReplyDelete
  20. Those ships look really cool. I wonder why the tail fins are so long

    ReplyDelete
  21. Soon, even schmucks like us will go.

    ReplyDelete
  22. I want to experience going to space before I die :D

    ReplyDelete
  23. wow very cool- awesome post, keep it up

    ReplyDelete
  24. This is really exciting but at the same time if something goes wrong it'll put us back like half a century because everyone will be too scared to try it again.

    ReplyDelete
  25. I am so freaking down, you have no idea. Though the price tag is a little bit higher than expected.

    ReplyDelete
  26. Hmmm sounds enticing, however lots of shit can go wrong, hope they plan it out well!

    ReplyDelete
  27. I want to go up there....gotta save my pennies up.

    ReplyDelete
  28. Hello Future, glad to see you finally made it. Very curious to see what the "normal" price will be once this sort of thing takes off.

    ReplyDelete
  29. before i die, i'd like to fap in space. is that gay (y/n)?

    ReplyDelete
  30. well, time to start dealing crack to afford a ticket to space.

    ReplyDelete
  31. holy shit. holy shit. having a mindgasm.

    ReplyDelete
  32. sweet,
    i've always wanted to go to space
    i hear they have great resturants

    ReplyDelete
  33. whoa, a little long, but it was all interesting stuff. thanks for the post!

    supporting

    ReplyDelete
  34. Hmmm, tempting, don't think I would though, just in case things go wrong.

    ReplyDelete
  35. OH GOD ME FIRST!!!!

    I wanna be in space!

    ReplyDelete
  36. I gotta make this a personal goal, and explore at least the stratosphere.

    ReplyDelete
  37. I've been hearing about this as long as Alien vs Predator... which did eventually come out, but you get my point.

    ReplyDelete
  38. Meh i'll go if theres entertainment on other planets!!

    ReplyDelete
  39. nice now i just need to be rich as fuck

    ReplyDelete
  40. Cool, but all they're doing is orbiting the Earth like a satellite right? I mean, I think we haven't had a ship able to reach the moon since the 70's? Still fun I guess though, able to see the Earth and live in Zero G.

    ReplyDelete
  41. I love how the Space shuttle "transforms" it's amazing that stuff only movies once can make are coming to reality.

    ReplyDelete
  42. I remember when I went out into space. I was planning on going to Mars, but I got tired so I went back home.

    ReplyDelete
  43. spaceship illustrations are awesome

    ReplyDelete
  44. It may be available in the next couple of months but no matter what it's still going to be expensive.

    ReplyDelete
  45. $200,000

    Yeah, I don't think I'll be taking a trip to outer space anytime soon....

    ReplyDelete