Even though it is still beyond the reach of the average working class consumers, does the recent crash of the Virgin Galactic SpaceShip Two represent a blow to “affordable” space tourism?
By: Ringo Bones
It was supposedly a routine test flight aimed to make space
tourism closer to the masses but in ended in tragedy when in October 31, 2014 a
Virgin Galactic SpaceShip Two space tourism craft suffered a catastrophic
failure after it separated from its mother ship White Knight Two and crashed
moments later into the Mojave Desert below. Even though the crash is under
further investigation to determine the cause of the tragedy according to Stuart
Witt CEO of Mojave Spaceport, witnesses on the ground says that the craft
appeared to be in pieces before it crashed to the floor of the Mojave Desert.
One pilot was killed while the co-pilot is seriously injured. Virgin CEO Sir Richard
Branson flew immediately to the crash site as soon as he heard the tragic news.
Will the recent disaster represent a giant step back to “affordable” space
tourism?
Compared to the US government run NASA, private space travel
and space tourism companies like Virgin with its Virgin Galactic space tourism
program seems to be able to make viable space travel programs at a far lesser
cost than government run counterparts. SpaceShip Two costs “only” 500 million
US dollars to develop – a bargain compared to comparable spending made by
similar NASA projects. While the Spaceship Two is slated to bring the first
batch of space tourist to their “suborbital” destinations by 2015, there are
700 customers who already paid the ticket price of 250,000 US dollars already
lining up for the experience including celebrities like Hollywood actor Tom Hanks
and song-and-dance man Justin Beiber and also Lady Gaga and Katy Perry .
By their very nature, our current spacecraft technology is
inherently dangerous in their operation because they operate under the extremes
of temperature and pressure. Like cryogenic fuels and oxidizers only tens of
degrees above absolute zero fueling a rocket engine that runs at a temperature
hot enough to vaporize steel. Not to mention reentry temperatures comparable to
that of free-flowing magma.
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