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Walk in Space for $15 Million (Plus Airfare)

avtchillsboro writes "A NY Times article has details on a news release by Space Adventures Ltd. (SAL). SAL has previously provided space trips to three wealthy individuals for (US)$20 million. The article announces the $15 million EVA 'upgrade', and quotes SAL chief executive Eric Anderson, who says that the plan has been approved by the Federal Space Agency of the Russian Federation; but the article also says that NASA has not been informed." From the article: "Fewer than 450 people have traveled to space, and the club of spacewalkers is even more exclusive. Just 151 people have stepped outside the relative safety of their craft to greet the void with only a visor to separate life and death. 'Spacewalk is the ultimate experience that we've managed to invent as humans,' said Tom Jones, a former astronaut and spacewalker who is an adviser to Space Adventures. Being outside the craft when 'there's nothing between you and the ground below but empty space,' he said, is 'incomparable.'"

10 of 133 comments (clear)

  1. NASA not informed? by Zouden · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I wasn't aware that NASA had to be informed about EVAs in space. If the Russians want to allow it, who's to stop them?

    --
    "A week in the lab saves an hour in the library"
    1. Re:NASA not informed? by MichaelSmith · · Score: 4, Interesting
      who's to stop them?

      Assuming that this is an EVA from the ISS they could egress from the Russian airlock but if there is a problem with that airlock they may have to enter through the US airlock. While outside they may have to interact with US hardware such as the external surfaces of the modules, communication gear, etc.

      I think NASA should definitely have a say in who does EVAs around the ISS.

      Also I think an EVA from a Soyuz would be out of the question on safety grounds.

    2. Re:NASA not informed? by cyclone96 · · Score: 4, Informative

      You are right...while they could egress the Russian Airlock (Pirs) and hang out over on the Russian Segment, most EVAs take some advantage of NASA assets. Primarily communications - the audio from the suits is relayed through the NASA Tracking and Data Relay satellite system which essentially has global coverage. While the EVA could be done with only Russian communications assets, it would take place only over Russian groundsites (about 15 minutes every orbit of 90 minutes). There is a considerable safety margin gained with the constant communications.

      Russian EVAs also take advantage of the external US television cameras, including those that are on the robotic arm. The robotic arm takes some planning and crew time to reposition, which is another NASA asset they are utilizing.

      Frankly, I'm somewhat surprised the Russians are offering this. I don't think the general public quite has a sense of how complex and how dangerous EVA actually is. The suits themselves are complicated little machines, and you need a great deal of training to react to emergencies (pump failures, leaks, etc.) to keep yourself from getting killed. Additionally, most EVA astronauts go through a lot of personal training to build up upper body strength and endurance. This is because doing an EVA is physically grueling, since you are working against the pressure in the suit.

      In other words, whoever goes outside really needs to know what they are doing. This is in contrast with simply riding up for the week onboard. While the trip up/down is dangerous, the customer doesn't really have to know/do all that much, except stay strapped into the seat and be trained on how to use the toilet.

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  2. Door Charge by WindowsIsForArseWipe · · Score: 5, Funny

    $15 Million for the space walk but you better have the $100 million if you hope to get back in!

  3. More exclusive Space Adventures! by pieterh · · Score: 4, Funny

    Over 450 people have been to space, and 150 have walked in space, but did you know that no-one has ever eaten hot chilis in space?!!

    Yes, for only a few dollars more you can be the first* to:

      - Sing "I did it my way" while orbiting the equator ($15m)
      - Take part in a Rheingold-approved smart mob from 150m up! ($16.5m)
      - Experience the dark side of the moon ($50m)
      - Dig for diamonds and gold on the surface of the moon ($350m)**
      - Dare to try "extreme reentry", just you and a suit and a chute ($5m)
      - Do the 'No HAL!' space dance ($30m)
      - Learn to patch an inflatable space station using chewing gum and frozen urine ($22.5m)
      - Take guitar lessons in space ($32m)
      - Conceive your next baby in space ($40m for two)

    * Alien visitations not included.
    ** Precious items recovered from the lunar surface are the property of the tour company.

    1. Re:More exclusive Space Adventures! by Mantrid42 · · Score: 5, Funny
      - Experience the dark side of the moon ($50m)

      This one actually just means that you watch the Wizard of Oz and listen to Pink Floyd... in SPACE!

  4. Tom Jones in space? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's not unusual.

  5. Re:$15 million for a thrill? by Tim+C · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Taken to its logical conclusion, none of us here should be spending the money on an internet connection, computer, console, TV, etc. Sure, none of those things on their own are very expensive, but taken as a whole over the whole population, it adds up.

    My £15/month for my ADSL connection, for example, would feed a family or two in the poorest parts of Africa, and yet here I am...

  6. Let me introduce you... by celotil · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From the summary:

    From the article:

    "Fewer than 450 people have traveled to space, and the club of spacewalkers is even more exclusive. Just 151 people have stepped outside the relative safety of their craft to greet the void with only a visor to separate life and death. 'Spacewalk is the ultimate experience that we've managed to invent as humans,' said Tom Jones, a former astronaut and spacewalker who is an adviser to Space Adventures. Being outside the craft when 'there's nothing between you and the ground below but empty space,' he said, is 'incomparable.'"

    Man, meet Infinity. Infinity, meet Man... Can I get you two something to drink? Perhaps a scotch, or some champagne?

    I think we should send our politicians into space, and I don't mean this as some sort of crass joke about death in a vacuum. We should send up these "World Leaders" and let them see just how small, how fragile our Earth is, how little blue-green haze separates us from the infinite donut, or is it a soccer ball?

    I've had dreams of space, vivid, lucid dreams of being out in the infinite with nothing separating me from the universe - not even a space suit, cause they're dreams you know. I've filled my head with enough pictures of Earth to imagine the sight of our space-faring home, looping and winging it's way through the Big Black in it's slightly off-centre orbit around Sol, our system of planets and star meandering along with the rest of the third arm.

    I'd love to see it for real. I know I probably won't in this life-time, so reincarnation is a nifty thing to wish upon for now.

    The politicians have the money and the resources though. They should go up, climb out of our gravity well and look upon the Earth, see just for themselves what it's like to stare down at their countries and feel the wonder of covering the United States of America, or Australia, with their palm, to blot out the United Kingdom with their thumb.

    They need to feel that wonder, that awe of seeing where we all live and realising that it's a tiny place in the universe, and we should really be focusing our war efforts on peaceful resolutions, scientific colaboration, and a joint effort to get out into our own galaxy, at least, and see if we can really make something of ourselves, rather than squabbling like children in the school yard.

    I'm sorry, I have no real point, I'm rambling.

    --
    Te Quiero, Puta!
  7. Re:$15 million for a thrill? by suffe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's not like they are taking a pile of $15M and setting it on fire. I would assume that most of the cost related to this will go back in to the economy in one way or another. Labor costs for constructing the EVA suit, material costs, labor costs for digging the material out of the ground et cetera. In other words, the money will just be allocated to some other place in the economy. Recommended reading would be Macroeconomics 101, Velocity of Money and perhaps something by Modigliani or Friedman.

    Now as for the price of the additional rocket fuel (not included in the $15M) is a completely different matter. Now that is, literally. burning money.

    --

    Karma: 2.71828182846 (Mostly due to small, fun pills)