How much it'd cost you to travel to space
Are the stars really the next frontier of travel? These visionaries are working to make it so.
Are the stars really the next frontier of travel? These visionaries are working to make it so.
The first issue of Airbnbmag, which is on stands now, could help you find a place to stay off-planet, too. Here are the companies competing to take travelers to the heavens, and how much we'll have to pay (and how long we'll have to wait) for the ride of a lifetime.
Worldview Express: $75,000
Float 100,000 feet to the edge of the atmosphere via a helium-balloon-powered space capsule. There's no training required for the four- to six-hour World View Voyager trip.
XCor Future Astronaut Program: $150,000
You'll experience six minutes of weightlessness and get your astronaut wings after summiting 62 miles above the Earth— aka outer space—in a rocket-engine-powered XCor Lynx Mark II two-seater.
Virgin Galactic: $250,000
After a 47,000-foot climb powered by the WhiteKnightTwo "mothership," the SpaceShipTwo will detach and launch past the atmosphere to a height of 68 miles and then glide back to Earth.
Space Adventures: $50 million
Eight space tourists, with great resources and bravery, have taken the Virginia-based company's two-day flight to spend a week and a half on the International Space Station, 249 miles above the Earth.
SpaceX: Undisclosed
Two individuals have recently signed up to take a weeklong journey that will "skim the surface of the moon." They will be the first people to go to deep space in 45 years.
The Case for Space
Elon Musk, founder of Tesla, has long had his head in the stars. His company SpaceX transports cargo for NASA to and from the International Space Station. Next up: a moon shot for two space tourists who are currently undergoing training. But Musk's ultimate goal is to help our species become interplanetary, as he explains below.
Why does space captivate you?
"Life needs to be about more than just solving problems. You need to be excited and inspired. Going to space would be a tremendous adventure—the most inspiring thing that I could possibly imagine doing."
Why should the rest of us care?
"There are two fundamental paths along which history could bifurcate. The first would have us stay confined on Earth forever until we face some extinction event, however far in the future that might be. The alternative path is to become a space-faring, multiplanet species—out there among the stars. I think the second path is a far more inspiring and exciting future."
What Americans Think About Space Travel
Thanks to Survey Monkey, we were able to see what you really think about going to space. A nationally representative group of 2,385 American adults responded.
66% were excited by the idea of space travel.
67% believe that there is life on other planets.
37% say they'd like to visit the seven newly discovered Earth-size exoplanets.
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