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Third 'Space Tourist' Blasts Off Into Space

auckland map writes "A Russian Soyuz rocket has lifted off from the Central Asian steppes, launching U.S. millionaire scientist Gregory Olsen and a new Russian-U.S. crew on a two-day journey to the international space station. Olsen is reportedly paying $20 million for this trip." From the article: "The cash-strapped Russian Federal Space Agency has turned to space tourism to generate money. Olsen is the third non-astronaut to visit the orbiting station. California businessman Dennis Tito paid about $20 million for a week long trip to the space station in 2001, and South African Mark Shuttleworth followed a year later."

2 of 83 comments (clear)

  1. "Don't call him a space tourist" by brian.glanz · · Score: 4, Informative
    "Don't call him a space tourist" as Alan Boyle says.

    Let's say scientist, engineer, inventor, or maybe inspiration (his bio at his company's site).

    1. Re:"Don't call him a space tourist" by brian.glanz · · Score: 4, Informative
      "Tourism can be defined as the act of travel for the purpose of recreation, and the provision of services for this act. A tourist is someone who travels at least fifty miles from home, as defined by the World Tourism Organization (a United Nations body)." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tourist

      50 miles: check.

      recreation: not so much, no.

      Olsen paid for access to a laboratory in which he will study things he could not anywhere else, such as crystal growth and infrared imaging sensor performance. Even during the two-day Soyuz journey to the ISS, Olsen is operating some oxygen systems and filling other small but necessary roles. He's spent the last several months training more as a member of the crew, even learning Russian (mandatory). He is not just along for the ride.

      Sounds like a great holiday to me, but as a matter of respect and perhaps even by definition, I would not call him a tourist.