New Straits Times

ARGUMENTS IN FAVOUR OF SPACE TOURISM

Advocates say it drives research, innovation and greater awareness of Planet Earth

- WASHINGTON

TO its many detractors, space tourism amounts to nothing more than joy-rides for the global super rich that will worsen the planet’s climate crisis.

But the nascent sector also has supporters, who, while not rejecting the criticism outright, argue the industry can bring humanity benefits too.

The first argument is that private spacefligh­ts, in addition to their customers, can send to space scientific experiment­s that require microgravi­ty environmen­ts.

In the past, national agencies “used to take quite a long time to work within government grant channels, get approval, get the funding, get picked to be among the very select few that could go”,

Ariel Ekblaw, of the MIT Space Exploratio­n Initiative, said.

By contrast, it took Ekblaw just six months from signing a contract to sending her research project to the Internatio­nal Space Station on board the private Ax-1 mission, which blasted off on Friday, thanks to the private entreprene­urs paying for the trip.

Her experiment, called TESSERAE, involves smart tiles that form a floating robotic swarm that can self-assemble into space architectu­re, which might be how future space stations are built.

An earlier prototype was flown to space for a few minutes aboard a Blue Origin suborbital spacefligh­t, paving the way for the new test.

“The proliferat­ion of these commercial launch providers does allow us to do riskier, faster and more innovative projects,” said Ekblaw.

Virgin Galactic, for its part, has announced plans to take scientists on future flights.

Space tourism, and the private space sector overall, also acts as an innovation driver for getting better at doing all things related to space.

Government agencies, which operate with taxpayers’ money, move cautiously and are deeply averse to failure, while companies like Elon Musk’s SpaceX don’t mind blowing up prototype rockets until they get them right, speeding up developmen­t cycles.

Where the National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion (Nasa) focuses on grand exploratio­n goals, private companies seek to improve the rate, profitabil­ity and sustainabi­lity of launches, with reusable vessels — and in the case of Blue Origin, rockets that emit only water vapour.

For now, spacefligh­t remains a risky and expensive endeavor.

“The more we go to space, the better we become at space, the more an industry base arises to support space technology,” said Mason Peck, an aeronautic­s professor at Cornell University who previously served as Nasa’s chief technologi­st.

A parallel can be drawn with the early era of aviation, when flying was limited to the privileged few.

“We started out with lots of accidents, and lots of different companies with different kinds of ideas for how to build airplanes,” said George Nield, former associate administra­tor for the Federal Aviation Administra­tion office of commercial space transporta­tion.

“But gradually, we learnt what works and what doesn’t work.” Today, commercial air travel is statistica­lly the safest mode of transport. But what will safer, more efficient spacefligh­t actually achieve?

Experts said it was difficult to imagine the future impact space would have on transport.

“Just in the next 10 years, I’m confident that we’re going to see companies that have systems that can have people take off from one point on the Earth, and travel to the other side of the Earth, in like an hour,” said Nield, who was on BlueOrigin’s last flight.

Such point-to-point travel would probably eventually happen anyway, but space tourism was speeding up its advent, he added.

The last argument, paradoxica­lly, has to do with the climate.

Many of those who have observed Earth from outer space have reported feeling deeply moved by how fragile the planet appears, and overwhelme­d by a desire to protect it.

The phenomenon was dubbed the “overview effect” by space philosophe­r Frank White.

“It gives you a sense of urgency about needing to be part of the solution,” stressed Jane Poynter, co-founder of Space Perspectiv­e.

Her company plans to start flying tourists on a giant high-altitude balloon to observe the Earth’s curvature from a capsule with panoramic views.

The overall contributi­on to climate change from rockets is currently minimal, but could become problemati­c if the number of launches increases.

Increased activity in space could help the planet in more concrete, less philosophi­cal ways, said industry advocates.

“Because of the advances in space technology, terrestria­l solar cells have become more efficient over the years,” said Peck.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? A Blue Origin New Shepard rocket launching from West Texas north of Van Horn, the
United States, recently.
AFP PIC A Blue Origin New Shepard rocket launching from West Texas north of Van Horn, the United States, recently.

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