Almost a century has passed since crossing the Atlantic in a luxury ocean liner was considered the crème de la crème of traveling. Since then tourism has changed quite a bit.
Virgin Galactic is taking tourism literally to new heights with the introduction of actual space tourism!
Yep, you heard right! This new ability is pushing boundaries that previously were held only in the distant future of science fiction dreamers.
This technology isn’t quite ready to visit the moon or take a lap around the International Space Station, but XCOR (another company looking into space travel) spokesman Mike Massee told USA Today in an April 27 article that the suborbital tours would allow passengers to “see stars and easily the curvature of Earth. And aside from the visual experience … it's also the ultimate roller-coaster ride."
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| www.gizbuy.com |
This adventure would certainly be the ultimate roller-coaster ride! According to the same USA Today article passengers will also experience genuine weightlessness from flying 68 miles into the air and being at the edge of space.
Thankfully, aerospace companies aren’t in too big of a rush to send civilians out to the stars. Both Virgin Galactic and XCOR are still in the testing and tweaking phases. Columnist Leonard David for Space Insider reported April 22 that Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipTwo made its first flight in October of 2010. The most recent and longest flight lasted just over 14 minutes on April 22.
To be fair, these real-life spaceships do not resemble any traditional spaceship you might be envisioning. The craft that six passengers and two pilots will be taken into space in (like SpaceShipTwo) will be launched from the center of its mother ship (WhiteKnightTwo) 50,000 feet in the air. All together it looks like this:
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| www.crunchgear.com |
The entire structure is very impressive. Composed of carbon composite construction rather than aluminum or another metal, SpaceShipTwo and WhiteKnightTwo are relatively light and incredibly durable.
The Virgin Galactic website spares no effort to show potential passengers the safety of their craft. President of Virgin Galactic Will Whitehorn expressed the importance of safety to Space News in an April 2006
“For us, the biggest risk is a medical incident in space. Heart and blood circulation -- those are our big issues. SpaceShipTwo is designed so that the passengers would survive even a catastrophic failure of the craft during flight.”
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| iainclaridge.co.uk |
With every precaution being taken to ensure that these spaceships are safe and functional, don’t be ready to take off with them quite yet. A ticket into space costs a pretty penny. An April 27 Time article reports a trip to space costing $20,000, however the goal of Virgin Galactic is to get the price down to the equivalent of an SUV.










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