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Nov 2008
Safety rules for space tourists
would ensure safe travel
London:
With plans underway for passenger space travel
becoming a reality by the middle of next decade, the
European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) has started
developing safety rules for civilian space flight.
According to a report in New Scientist, EASA has decided
to develop the new rules after Sweden built a spaceport
from which Virgin Galactic may offer flights into
the aurora borealis, a major attraction for people.
"Both (Virgin's) carrier aircraft and the rocket-powered
aeroplane/glider would meet the definition of an aircraft,
and therefore fall under EASA's scope," said a spokesman.
The International Association for the Advancement
of Space Safety also wants a United Nations-backed
global agreement that mandates safety measures in
space. A number of scientists are convinced that "space
tourism" and "sub-orbital point to point travel" (SPTP)
are on the point of becoming flourishing industries.
Space tourism, which is already a reality, can only
be afforded by the affluent, as companies like Virgin
Atlantic can charge exorbitant prices like 200,000
(US) dollars or 125,000 pounds for a space flight.
But, this is just a staging post for the ultimate
goal, which is traveling through space to get from
one side of the globe to the other in a couple of
hours. The advocates of SPTP see it as the 21st century
equivalent of taking a trip on Concorde - and appealing
to the same sort of clientele. It would enable people
to go from one side of the globe to the other in a
couple of hours. Such travel will not come cheap,
as one estimate suggests a ticket for a round trip
taking in London, Tokyo and New York would cost more
than 43,000 pounds. But, the fares in the middle of
the next decade will be the equivalent of what passengers
were paying to fly on Concorde during its heyday.
-Nov
10, 2008
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