Sunday, June 23, 2019
Tuesday, June 18, 2019
Commercial Launch Demand to Private Microgravity Habitats at Low Earth Orbit
Notional 7 meter in diameter Blue Origin space habitat (Credit: NASA & Blue Origin) |
By Marcel F. Williams
A 2018 Pew Research poll suggest that 42% of Americans would be interested in traveling into space. But, so far, only seven super wealthy individuals have been able to do so with their own private funds. Multimillionaire Dennis Tito was the first tourist to travel into space to the ISS. Billionaire Charles Simonyi was the first space tourist to pay for two trips to the ISS.
The Russian space agency has charged these super wealthy individuals between $20 million to $40 million to travel to the ISS. And because of the extraordinarily high cost of space travel, space tourism has been exclusively for the super wealthy.
Multimillionaire Dennis Tito (far left) became the first space tourist in April of 2001 |
There are over 2100 billionaires on Earth. 52,000 people in the world who are worth over $100 million with 15,000 of those individuals living in the US alone. So there are at least 52,000 people on Earth who could afford to travel to a space and to a space station at current prices.
Companies like Bigelow Aerospace have also been developing their own private space habitats that they hope to deploy some time during the next decade. And NASA has recently presented space habitat concepts from several private space companies including Blue Origin and Lockheed Martin.
Notional 8.4 meter in diameter SLS derived microgravity habitat (Credit NASA) |
A large microgravity recreational area should also be available for guest. And the recreational area should be at least as spacious as the accommodations experienced by astronauts aboard the old 6.6 meter in diameter Skylab facility. Notional habitats derived from the New Glenn upper stage (7 meters in diameter), Bigelow's Olympus: BA-2100 (12.6 meters in diameter), and SLS propellant tank technology derived habitats (8.4 meters in diameter) should provide spacious environments for microgravity recreational activities.
A Cupola window viewing area of the Earth should be continuously available for guest.
Samantha Cristoforetti taking photos within the ISS Cupola (Credit: NASA) |
Notional FlexCraft single person vehicle (Credit: NASA) |
If the polls are correct then their should be at least 6300 super wealthy Americans who desire to travel to a space station-- and can afford to do so. And if there is a similar statistical desire world wide, then there should be at least 22,000 super wealthy people who want to travel into space-- and can afford to do so.
Annually, if just 10% of the super wealthy who desired to travel into space (2200 people)-- did so-- that would require 440 to 550 private commercial launches every year. In 2018, there were only 111 successful space launches with only four them being crew launches. So space tourism should create dramatic increase in the launch rate accompanied by substantial reductions in launch cost. But even if it were only 1%, that would require 44 to 55 private commercial launches every year.
But what if there was a national or even an international lotto system that could allow private individuals to risk an American dollar for a chance to travel into space? What if 42% of adult Americans risked $5 a year, on average, for a chance to travel into space through a Space Lotto system? That would generate approximately $1.2 billion a year for crew launches. And that would be enough money to send 24 average Jane's and Joe's into space every year (5 to 6 additional crew launches).
But you could add even more incentive for Americans to purchase Space Lotto tickets if winners were given a monetary prize of $250,000 (less than 1% of the cost for the round trip ticket to space). Winners could be given $125,000 initially for their time off from work for astronaut training and traveling into space. An additional $125,000 would be given to them once they returned from space.
If 42% of the world's adult population were willing to participate in Space Lotto system with a similar financial reward but only risked $2 per year, that would still generate $5 billion a year. That could purchase enough tickets for 100 winners per year (20 to 25 additional crew launches).
Optimally, a single private space habitat might be able to accommodate 36 tourist flights per year for a 10 day stay. Ten habitats would be required to accommodate 360 flights per year. So, obviously, there would also be a significant launch demand just to deploy the private habitats needed to accommodate potential tourist.
Recreational activity within the interior of the 6.6 meter in diameter Skylab space station.
References and Links
Space tourism? Majority of Americans say they wouldn’t be interested
NASA LEO Commercialization Study ResultsSpace Tourism
Space Adventures
FlexCraft
Bigelow aims to sell rides to space station on SpaceX Dragon ships for $52M a seat
The World's BillionairesYou're not rich until you have $100 million, says rich people
Ultra high-net-worth individual
Here's where the world's richest 0.00168% live
Labels:
billionaire,
Blue Origin,
FlexCraft,
LEO,
microgravity,
NASA,
space habitat,
space lotto,
Space Station,
space tourism
Sunday, June 2, 2019
Ford's Bipedal Package Delivery Robot
Links and References
Ford tests package-carrying robots for driverless delivery
Ford Demos Headless, Human-like Delivery Robot
In Ford's Future, Two Legged Robots and Self Driving Cars could Team up on DeliveriesFord taps Agility Robotics’ bipedal robot to test package delivery
Labels:
automated vehicles,
bipedal robot,
Ford Delivery Robot,
robots
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