Milestone

84. THE FINAL FRONTIER

Space tourism is blast off – book your next vacation on Mars

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From two weeks in the

Seychelles to touring the atmosphere, luxury vacations have come a long way in the last decade. 2018 marks blast-off for commercial space tourism

proper, says Jenny Southan, so where to next?

“The first thing that will happen when you are in space is just the feeling of weightless­ness, being free like a bird, no strings attached. Watching the beautiful Earth, the blue waters, the land masses, the darkness of the universe in the back,” says multi-millionair­e Per Wimmer, one of Virgin Galactic’s soonto-be space tourists, in a video interview with The Economist. “I can’t think about a better place to be,” he says.

Many people are inclined to agree. For the first time in the history of mankind, this year is expected to mark the take-off of commercial space tourism, giving everyday people the chance to experience what only 500 or so profession­al astronauts have so far been able to enjoy. Not only is Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic hoping for lift off with a payload of customers before the end of 2018, Elon Musk’s Space X is planning to take a pair of mysterious wealthy individual­s on a trip around the moon – that’s further than any human has been since the early 1970s.

ATMOSPHERI­C TRAVEL

For the traveller who has done and seen it all, space tourism promises the ultimate thrill but of course, it doesn’t come cheap. Not including the price of training, a ticket aboard Virgin Galactic will cost $250,000, with flights taking off from Spaceport America in the New Mexico desert, up to the edge of the atmosphere. In April 2018, its rocket-powered VSS Unity craft performed a number of successful test flights, with Branson widely reported as saying: “we are now just months away from Virgin Galactic sending people into space.”

The Virgin Atlantic entreprene­ur isn’t the only one to branch out from convention­al passenger aviation. Earlier this summer, the holding company for Japanese airline ANA announced it had bought a 10 per cent stake in commercial space flight start-up PD Aerospace, which intends to take citizens off-world by the end of 2023. At the same time, US hotelier Robert Bigelow (who founded Budget Suites of

During the 11-minute sub-orbital flight passengers will enjoy four minutes of weightless­ness

America) wants to tap into the galactic hospitalit­y market by launching an inflatable space hotel twice the size of the Internatio­nal Space Station (ISS), which will be ready for reservatio­ns in about a decade.

CALL A CAB – TO SPACE

If you don’t feel you can wait that long, private US company Space Adventures is able to arrange for Russia’s Soyuz “space taxi” to shuttle you up to the ISS itself for a ten-day trip, completing one orbit of our planet, 250 miles below, every 90 minutes. At the moment, the Soyuz is the only spacecraft able to transport private individual­s to the ISS but American aircraft manufactur­er Boeing is developing the new CST-100 Starliner capsule, which will see test flights begin later this year. Space Adventures says it has the rights to market seats onboard once it is operationa­l. Tempted?

Only those with tens of millions of dollars in the bank need apply.

Tipped for departures in the very near future (possibly this year or next), Amazon founder Jeff Bezos has also been working on his own spaceline, Blue Origin (there’s a theme emerging here: space tourism seems to be a favourite hobby among the world’s wealthiest men). It’s already completed eight test flights for its New Shepard rocket, which has been designed to take amateur cosmonauts out of this world. The spacious capsule will feature six large windows for unparallel­ed views and will be fully reusable – an important factor in making this emerging industry sustainabl­e. During the 11-minute sub-orbital flight, passengers will enjoy four minutes of weightless­ness before descending back to Earth, much as they would with Virgin Galactic.

More than an elevated fairground ride, Moon Express, on the other hand, has ambitions to supply lunar vacations. While Space X won’t be making a stop on the surface of the Moon itself, this Florida-based company is setting about doing just that – and, amazingly, within a ten-year timeframe. Its website states: “Soon we can all set sail as explorers to Earth’s eighth continent, seeking new knowledge, opportunit­y and adventure.” What’s perhaps most exciting, though, is the prospect of this giant rock having reserves of water, which, when broken down into its elemental forms of hydrogen and oxygen, can be used as fuel, making the moon a giant “gas station in the sky” for onward voyages to Mars.

Not to be outdone, Space X’s Musk also has his sights set on the red planet and is already in the throes of building a BFR (Big F*****g Rocket) capable of getting us there. And he’s not alone – earlier this year it was announced that the UAE wants to send a probe to Mars by 2021, to coincide with the 50-year anniversar­y of the founding of the United Arab Emirates. With this in mind, it might not take as long as we think for a human colony to be establishe­d down there (the UAE believes it could have one up and running by 2117) although it may be longer until people are booking holidays on Mars.

The UAE wants to send a probe to Mars by 2021, to coincide with the 50th anniversar­y of the founding of the United Arab Emirates

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 ??  ?? Mars: your next holiday destinatio­n?
Mars: your next holiday destinatio­n?
 ??  ?? The Space X launch complex is a feat of engineerin­g
The Space X launch complex is a feat of engineerin­g
 ??  ?? The Falcon 9 Interstage is inspected
The Falcon 9 Interstage is inspected
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 ??  ?? Richard Branson and Virgin Galactic CEO George Whitesides
Richard Branson and Virgin Galactic CEO George Whitesides

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