четверг, 1 января 2015 г.

Two of the three Soyuz seats will be sold to paying passengers, with the third reserved for a profes


THE MAGAZINE BLOGS HEALTH MEDICINE MIND BRAIN TECHNOLOGY SPACE PHYSICS LIVING WORLD ENVIRONMENT PHOTOS RSS January/February 2015 ABOUT THE MAGAZINE Subscriber Benefits Current Issue Special Issues Subscribe E-mail luxury rental cars in new orleans Newsletter Contact Us Press Room Copyright Policy luxury rental cars in new orleans Digital FAQ About Us Issue Archive Events Advertise RSS Customer Service Privacy Policy Terms of Use Trips & Tours DEPARTMENTS 20 Things You Didn't Know Big Idea Mind Over Matter Out There Vital Signs Ask Discover Getting Personal Notes From Earth Reviews luxury rental cars in new orleans RECENT luxury rental cars in new orleans OUR BLOGS D-brief Body Horrors Collide-a-Scape Inkfish Neuroskeptic Science Sushi Field Notes The Crux Citizen Science Salon ImaGeo Lovesick Cyborg Out There Seriously, Science? RECENT TOPICS personal health sex & reproduction genes & health infectious diseases cancer mental health aging biotechnology vaccines & drugs medical technology nutrition obesity RECENT TOPICS psychology intelligence emotions drugs & addiction alzheimer's disease brain structure & function memory & learning senses mental health RECENT TOPICS biotechnology computers virtual reality nanotechnology materials luxury rental cars in new orleans science transportation robots energy gadgets weapons & security medical technology communication networks RECENT TOPICS space exploration stars subatomic particles mars dark matter stargazing meteors & asteroids math physics luxury rental cars in new orleans cosmology extraterrestrial life solar system exoplanets comets RECENT TOPICS paleontology animals plants human origins dinosaurs evolution agriculture genetics microbes & viruses ecology archaeology unusual organisms sex & reproduction RECENT TOPICS earth science water arctic & antarctic luxury rental cars in new orleans ocean natural luxury rental cars in new orleans disasters natural resources climate change energy forest & rainforest environmental policy pollution sustainability RECENT luxury rental cars in new orleans PHOTO GALLERIES MAGAZINE BLOGS TOPICS PHOTOS
LOGIN » LOGOUT » THE MAGAZINE BLOGS D-brief The Crux Body Horrors Citizen Science Salon Collide-a-Scape ImaGeo Inkfish Lovesick Cyborg Neuroskeptic Out There Science Sushi Seriously, Science? Field Notes HEALTH MEDICINE MIND BRAIN TECHNOLOGY SPACE PHYSICS LIVING luxury rental cars in new orleans WORLD ENVIRONMENT PHOTOS LOGIN LOGOUT NEWSLETTER RSS CUSTOMER SERVICE TOPICS Space Exploration | Math | Stars | Physics | Subatomic Particles | Cosmology | Mars | Extraterrestrial Life | Dark Matter | Solar System | Stargazing luxury rental cars in new orleans | Exoplanets | Meteors Asteroids | Comets POPULAR TOPICS space exploration stars subatomic particles mars dark matter stargazing meteors & asteroids math physics cosmology extraterrestrial life solar system exoplanets luxury rental cars in new orleans comets
The brilliant orb of Earth recedes into deepest black as you perform zero-gravity acrobatics or eat freeze-dried astronaut ice cream as it was meant to be eaten while hurtling through space. This heightened experience was once reserved for the superhumans who clawed their way to the top of the astronaut list. Today, thanks to the blossoming private spaceflight industry, almost anyone can participate, although the exact mileage you can rack up depends on the size of your wallet.
One of the biggest attractions of spaceflight is the chance to escape gravity s pull and experience weightlessness . You can actually luxury rental cars in new orleans sample this sensation within Earth s atmosphere luxury rental cars in new orleans in 30-second chunks. All you need is a plane big enough to accommodate some gymnastics and a pilot willing to fly the roller-coaster trajectory luxury rental cars in new orleans required to produce the feeling of zero-g. The process: The plane flies through a series of parabolas; approaching the top of each parabola, passengers are accelerated upward, becoming weightless as they go over the hump. The Las Vegas based Zero Gravity Corporation supplies both pilot and plane. A modified Boeing 727 with most seats removed provides plenty luxury rental cars in new orleans of space for floating.
Preparation for flight consists of donning a flight suit and watching a training video. Zero Gravity eschews the words motion sickness, preferring the more public relations friendly phrase motion discomfort, but passengers who are worried should have their doctor write a prescription for motion sickness pills in advance. luxury rental cars in new orleans Zero Gravity flies 15 or so parabolas each trip, and the flight lasts about 90 minutes.
I went up as part of a Northrop Grumman sponsored flight of schoolteachers, who were videotaping a variety of experiments to show their students. This meant a full cabin, which at times resembled a human washing machine as the teachers bounced off each other while trying to do their experiments and line up their cameras for a good shot. Still, weightlessness was exhilarating. Thirty seconds may not sound like a lot, but in fact it is more than enough time to fly like Superman, spin in midair like an Olympic gymnast, or try to gobble up free-falling luxury rental cars in new orleans M Ms. To paraphrase Matthew Broderick in Ferris Bueller luxury rental cars in new orleans s Day Off : If you have the means, I highly recommend it.
It has been 35 years since human beings last visited our lunar neighbor as part of NASA s immense Apollo program, making the prospect of a private voyage to the moon seem ridiculous. But as it turns out, the Russians have been reliably building potential moonships since the 1960s. The stubby three-person Soyuz spacecraft, now used to transport crews to and from the International luxury rental cars in new orleans Space Station (ISS), was originally designed as part of the Soviet Union s failed lunar program , and an unmanned version, dubbed Zond 5, flew around luxury rental cars in new orleans the moon and returned safely to Earth in 1968. Building on this reliability, the Russians have partnered with Space Adventures of Vienna , Virginia, to offer service to private tourists for a fee. Only small modifications are needed to retrofit the Soyuz for tourism, explains Eric Anderson, CEO of Space Adventures. One is the approximate doubling of the Soyuz window from some 10 inches to 2 feet in diameter, all the better for sightseeing. Another is enabling a high-definition camera for streaming video and things like that.
Two of the three Soyuz seats will be sold to paying passengers, with the third reserved for a professional cosmonaut who will act as spaceship captain and tour guide. We re in final negotiations with the two people who will be on the first mission, Anderson says. Once the contracts are signed, we think we can fly within four or five years.
The plan is to have the Soyuz dock with the ISS for a week, then leave and rendezvous with an upper booster stage that will lend the Soyuz enough thrust to reach the moon in three days. It will take just a few hours for the craft to loop around, coming within luxury rental cars in new orleans 60 miles of the lunar surface before slinging back toward Earth and a landing on the Kazakh luxury rental cars in new orleans steppe.
Space Adventures is the company behind the crop of space tourists who have already visited the ISS, beginning with Dennis Tito in 2001. Tito spent a year in training and learned Russian to prepare for his trip, but now tourists need just six months of training, and you have to learn only a few basic phrases in Russian, Anderson says. Tourists fly on board a Soyuz and can spend 10 days on the station conducting experiments, looking out the window to magnificent views of Earth below, or doing whatever else they want. (Tito spent eight days looking out the window and listening to opera.) Recently there have been rumblings luxury rental cars in new orleans that Soyuz seats will not be available for tourists in the coming years because government astronauts and cosmonauts will need every last one to staff the growing space station. The good news is that the Soyuz production rate is going to be increased by a factor of two starting in 2009, Anderson says. We re investigating ways to even increase the production rate beyond that. I m quite confident that there will be even more seats for private missions in the future.
This is the cheapest way yet to actually get into space: a suborbital shot that lets a spacecraft poke briefly out of the atmosphere, like a flying fish skimming the waves. There are a number of companies trying to build commercial suborbital spacecraft, but the current leader is Virgin Galactic, which will use a vehicle built by Burt Rutan , the designer of the Ansari X Prize winning SpaceShipOne , the only private manned spacecraft thus far to have left the atmosphere. The ship under construction for Virgin Galactic, luxury rental cars in new orleans SpaceShipTwo , is more or less a scaled-up version luxury rental cars in new orleans of this pioneering spacecraft. At least 200 people have signed up for Virgin luxury rental cars in new orleans Galactic flights already. The company plans to start flying passengers as early as 2009, using the same basic plan that was used to launch SpaceShipOne: A large aircraft acting luxury rental cars in new orleans as a mother ship will carry the spacecraft to around 50,000 feet. The mother ship will drop the spacecraft, and a hybrid solid/liquid-fuel engine (chosen because it is believed to be safer than tra-?ditional liquid- or solid-fuel luxury rental cars in new orleans engines) will quickly ignite. SpaceShipTwo will then tilt backward and power its way out of the atmosphere, reaching a final altitude of more than 360,000 luxury rental cars in new orleans feet after about 90 seconds. Passengers will have a few minutes of weightlessness in which to float about the cabin and look out the windows. SpaceShipTwo will then reenter the atmosphere and glide to a touchdown at the airport from which it embarked.
If you don t have the cash to get all the way into space, you can strap yourself into the two-seater cockpit of a MiG-31, the most advanced Russian fighter jet in operation. Blasting off from an airfield near the city of Nizhniy Novgorod (formerly Gorki) and flown by one of the manufacturer s test pilots, the MiG-31 is capable of streaking through the sky at more than twice the speed of sound and reaching an altitude of 13 miles putting you above the bulk of the atmosphere, high enough to see the curvature of Earth below. Participants train and fly on the same day. The whole flight lasts about 50 to 55 minutes, with 7 to 10 minutes of that time spent above 45,000 feet, in the black verge of space.
Sure, we ve all seen space shuttle launches on TV. But actually being there not just seeing but also hearing and feeling the full fury of more than 9 million pounds of

Комментариев нет:

Отправить комментарий