Vietnam.vn - Nền tảng quảng bá Việt Nam

Space tourism is no longer for millionaires

VnExpressVnExpress08/02/2024


Companies around the world are racing to send passengers into space, and travel enthusiasts can find themselves a cheaper ticket.

Besides the trend of traveling all over the Earth to "collect enough countries" on their passports, the super-rich are moving towards a new trend - space tourism . This type of tourism is developed when wealthy tourists are no longer satisfied with just exploring everywhere on Earth.

The race to take passengers into space is being fiercely contested by the trio of billionaires Richard Branson, Jeff Bezos, and Elon Musk to become the leader in this field.

Blue Origin's New Shepard spacecraft system. Photo: Blue Origin

Blue Origin's New Shepard spacecraft system. Photo: Blue Origin

American businessman Dennis Tito was the first space tourist, paying $20 million to fly on a Russian spacecraft and spend seven days on the International Space Station (ISS) in 2001.

In 2021, both Richard Branson’s Virgin Galactic and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin made significant progress, successfully testing human flights into suborbital space. Suborbital flights are flights that have not yet completed an orbit or reached escape velocity, the minimum speed needed to escape Earth’s gravitational influence.

Elon Musk's SpaceX Space Dragon, developed with Houston-based space tourism company Axiom Space, will go further. In 2021, SpaceX will conduct its first civilian flight, taking four tourists to and safely returning them. A seat on the flights will sell for $55 million.

Virgin Galactic claims to have 800 people on the waiting list for its $868,000-a-ticket space flights. Flights are currently suspended until 2026 to await a new line of spacecraft. Blue Origin auctioned off one of the six tickets for the flight, with one customer paying $2.8 million for it.

The current attraction for space tourists is not just to make a few orbits around the Earth, but also to spend time on the ISS, being served meals and accommodation. This promises to develop a new business in the future - hotels and restaurants in space. The Russian space agency Roscosmos is also making a deal to send billionaires to the ISS.

Aspiring space travelers can opt for a less expensive option. Edyta Teper, Vice President of Global Sales and Commercial Operations at Space Perspective, bills itself as the world’s first luxury, carbon-neutral spaceflight experience. The Florida-based company’s vision is to make space travel accessible to everyone, not just millionaires.

Reservations are now open for Spaceship Neptune, a pressurized vessel propelled by a giant space balloon that will fly about 30km above Earth, to the “edge of space”, where passengers can view the curve of the Earth from premium seats.

According to Teper, guests can view the Earth through "unprecedented" large windows, be served "world-class" meals with cocktails, toilets and even wifi.

Passengers do not need training or coaching like space flights and this is seen as an advantage. The speed of the ship is slow, aiming for a gentle experience as passengers see their world from a different perspective.

The cost of a trip is about $125,000. The entire flight lasts about six hours. According to Teper, the company has sold 1,650 seats and is booked through the end of the year.

Anh Minh (According to Traveller )



Source link

Comment (0)

No data
No data

Same tag

Same category

Image of dark clouds 'about to collapse' in Hanoi
The rain poured down, the streets turned into rivers, Hanoi people brought boats to the streets
Re-enactment of the Ly Dynasty's Mid-Autumn Festival at Thang Long Imperial Citadel
Western tourists enjoy buying Mid-Autumn Festival toys on Hang Ma Street to give to their children and grandchildren.

Same author

Heritage

Figure

Enterprise

No videos available

News

Political System

Destination

Product