Your Ad Here at OABS!

Sergey Brin pays $5m to reserve seat in Space Flight

The company that sends wealthy tourists into space announced plans Wednesday for a private flight in 2011 to the international space station on a Russian-built Soyuz rocket and said Google co-founder Sergey Brin has paid $5 million to reserve a seat on a future flight.

Space Adventures said no decision has been made yet about when Brin, a 35-year-old billionaire and native of Moscow, will fly or where he might go.

So far, the company has sent five tourists to the space station, but it has also been dreaming about other destinations, including a swing around the far side of the moon.

Brin didn't appear at the company's news conference at the Explorer's Club in Manhattan, but he said in a statement that he considered his $5 million deposit an investment in the company, as well as an option to participate in a future space flight.

"I am a big believer in the exploration and commercial development of the space frontier, and am looking forward to the possibility of going into space," the statement said.

On each of its five previous missions, the Virginia-based company has essentially been tagging along aboard flights already scheduled by the Russians.

The sixth customer, computer game designer Richard Garriott, is scheduled to go up in October after paying $35 million for his seat. He is a vice chairman of Space Adventures and the son of NASA astronaut Owen Garriott, who sits on the company's advisory board.

For the 2011 mission, however, Space Adventures would charter an entire Soyuz space flight, with space for two clients plus a Russian cosmonaut. Russia's Federal Space Agency would still run the mission, but Space Adventures would pay for the trip and buy its own Soyuz spacecraft.
"The Soyuz to be used for this mission shall be a specially manufactured craft, separate from the other Soyuz vehicles designated for the transportation of the (space station) crews," Alexey B. Krasnov, who heads Russia's manned space program, said in a statement released by the company.

Space Adventures has been planning for a trip in which one of its craft would circle — but not land on — the moon. Diamandis said he expects to have a customer take the first such flight within five years.

It has been advertising tickets on that flight at $100 million per seat.

                                                                                                                      source: nydailynews.com

0 comments: