But given new ram jet technologies new craft built by combination of factories and assembled in space airports like that Sir Richard Branson built. But once the moon race ended, there has been only sporadic interest in the moon India space agency sent their own Lunar-Rover but that about it. But the firm has talked to other countries, which are showing a combined interest in the lunar market which maybe set to become a world corporation. The former NASA associate administrator ‘Alan Stern’ who is president of the new ‘Golden Spike Company’ hopes to assemble these craft. Stern said he's looking at countries like South Africa, South Korea, and Japan. It's not about being first to control this opportunistic market as moon has more land than the earth. It's about joining the lunar farming club,' Stern said. 'We're kind of cleaning up what NASA started to achieve in the 1960s. We're going to make it a commodity with it in the 2020s even just to have a contribution development base. Stern said he's aiming for a first launch before the end of the decade and then up 15 or 20 launches total at first. Dozens of private space companies have started up recently, but few if any will make it without American knowledge - just like in other fields - said Harvard astronomer Jonathan McDowell, who tracks launches worldwide. As Wise Labs have stated if it was that easy to go to the moon giving the journey, the only first world power of the united states would put a permanent base their as mars seem to be the more resourceful option group of space craft having return flight landed inspected and in waiting .
So with a team of former Nasa executives is launching a private venture to send people to the moon for a price that is definitely out of this world. For £950, ($1.5 billion), the newly formed business is offering countries a two-person trip to the moon, either for research or national prestige. Nasa's last trip to the moon was 40 years ago. Buzz Aldrin, the lunar module pilot, walking on the surface of the Moon. But today private US firm says it can fly tourists to the surface - for $1.5bn but funding for this wouldn't be allocated to Nasa. Many of those companies hope to follow the success of Space X solution, which has ferried cargo to the International Space Station for NASA. But more than 90 percent of new ventures will fail due to funding onto the safety stages before anything is built, one has to remember Nasa did many tests using real life monkeys although humans are bigger more important he said. 'This is unlikely to be the one that will pan out, as the proto type is sitting in our yard' McDowell said. Even though many countries ponies up millions of dollars to fly their astronauts including to the Russian space station Mir and the American space shuttles in the 1990s, a billion dollar price tag seems a bit steep, he said. The company has revealed no official information about how the mission will work until this copied is on the launch pad, but promotional material shows an orbiting module, left, and a landing craft, right similar to original 1969 Apollo. The firm is developing the Lander and spacesuits for the mission with third party firms that would come from simple factories process, and buying the rest of the equipment from existing space firms The Company will buy existing rockets and capsules to transport people to the lunar surface these are in waiting surplices.
No comments:
Post a Comment