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ID075910
Title ProperIs it finally time for space tourism?
LanguageENG
AuthorLaunius, Roger D ;  Jenkins, Dennis R
Publication2006.
Summary / Abstract (Note)To date, only four paying space tourists have flown, and the prospect for broad, sustainable space tourism remains a dream. This article notes that there are two types of tourists conflated by the advocates of space tourism. The first are a tiny group of adventurers with significant wealth and other resources who seek thrills and bragging rights. They have enjoyed success in using government-owned resources for their extreme tourism experience by flying on Soyuz capsules operated by Russia, and the International Space Station owned and operated by a consortium of nations as a major research station. The second group seeks more modest excursions with a minimum of risk and a smaller price tag. Only the first group has much prospect for tourism in space in the foreseeable future, but the second group is the more important, and expanding its space tourism opportunities represents the primary means of achieving the goal of opening space to the public. This article also differentiates between private sector suborbital space tourism, which may achieve reality within the next five to seven years, and the prospects for orbital space tourism, which are at least an order of magnitude more difficult and will probably require at least another generation of technological work to achieve.
`In' analytical NoteAstropolitics Vol. 4, No.3; Winter 2006: p253 - 280
Journal SourceAstropolitics Vol. 4, No.3; Winter 2006: p253 - 280
Key WordsSpace ;  Space Tourism