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ISS Space NASA

SpaceX Launches a Billionaire To Conduct the First Private Spacewalk (apnews.com) 76

An anonymous reader quotes a report from the Associated Press: A daredevil billionaire rocketed back into orbit Tuesday, aiming to perform the first private spacewalk and venture farther than anyone since NASA's Apollo moonshots. Unlike his previous chartered flight, tech entrepreneur Jared Isaacman shared the cost with SpaceX this time around, which included developing and testing brand new spacesuits to see how they'll hold up in the harsh vacuum. If all goes as planned, it will be the first time private citizens conduct a spacewalk, but they won't venture away from the capsule. Considered one of the riskiest parts of spaceflight, spacewalks have been the sole realm of professional astronauts since the former Soviet Union popped open the hatch in 1965, closely followed by the U.S. Today, they are routinely done at the International Space Station.

Isaacman, along with a pair of SpaceX engineers and a former Air Force Thunderbirds pilot, launched before dawn aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Florida. The spacewalk is scheduled for Thursday, midway through the five-day flight. But first the passengers are shooting for way beyond the International Space Station -- an altitude of 870 miles (1,400 kilometers), which would surpass the Earth-lapping record set during NASA's Project Gemini in 1966. Only the 24 Apollo astronauts who flew to the moon have ventured farther. The plan is to spend 10 hours at that height -- filled with extreme radiation and riddled with debris -- before reducing the oval-shaped orbit by half. Even at this lower 435 miles (700 kilometers), the orbit would eclipse the space station and even the Hubble Space Telescope, the highest shuttle astronauts flew.

All four wore SpaceX's spacewalking suits because the entire Dragon capsule will be depressurized for the two-hour spacewalk, exposing everyone to the dangerous environment. Isaacman and SpaceX's Sarah Gillis will take turns briefly popping out of the hatch. They'll test their white and black-trimmed custom suits by twisting their bodies. Both will always have a hand or foot touching the capsule or attached support structure that resembles the top of a pool ladder. There will be no dangling at the end of their 12-foot (3.6-meter) tethers and no jetpack showboating. Only NASA's suits at the space station come equipped with jetpacks, for emergency use only.

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SpaceX Launches a Billionaire To Conduct the First Private Spacewalk

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  • by Powercntrl ( 458442 ) on Tuesday September 10, 2024 @04:29PM (#64778117) Homepage

    It's a nice start, now can we send the rest of the billionaires and leave them there?

    I kid, I kid.

    • Do you want Elysium? Because that's how you get Elysium. (and not in a good way)
      • I have a pretty hard time imagining what that level of wealth would even be like, since as it is I spend a lot of time coming up with ways of doing things in the most frugal means possible.

        That being said, I doubt I'd want to take a space trip even for free. There's still too much potential for things to go wrong, and I also don't particularly like the idea of being in the limelight either. Though, if space flights were cheap enough that anyone could take them, that certainly would eliminate the whole fam

        • by GoTeam ( 5042081 )
          I can't imagine a better test dummy than a rich famous person. If everything goes well, they paid for it. If it goes poorly... at least it wasn't a normal person that had a rough trip. (my apologies to the hard working engineers that would meet their end with the rich famous person)
    • by syn3rg ( 530741 )
      According to the guide [fandom.com], we will need 3 rockets.
  • by BigFire ( 13822 ) on Tuesday September 10, 2024 @04:50PM (#64778171)

    going as far away from Earth for human since Apollo, and above the usual layer of Van Allen belt. After they achieved that, they'll purge nitrogen from the cabinet to go to a high oxygen to accumulate to what their space suit will be in. Once that's done, they'll don the space suit, pressurize it, and then depressurize the cabinet for space walk. Once the spacewalk is complete, the hatch will close and the vehicle re-pressurized. This is essentially what Gemini IV did.

    • by sconeu ( 64226 )

      That's what all the Gemini spacewalks did (except for the nitro purge -- they used a pure O2 environment).

      It's also what was done for the LM (again, except the nitro purge).

  • SpaceX Launches a Billionaire ...

    It was the wrong billionaire.

  • It's bigger than Apollo, but it's still not a very big ship. You're up there for 5 days, with your 3 colleagues. Let's say on day 1, last night's lasagna starts banging on the door, wanting out.

    What? Do you sit in it for the better part of a week? Are you diapered up, plugged in, have a butt-hatch, un-suit or what? No matter what, you're gonna know your billionaire pal intimately by the end of the trip.

    • Nah, they eat military MREs from the 80's and 90's for a week before going up. You won't shit for weeks after eating those for a few days. (I know, I spent 3 months eating them in the Persian Gulf until an actual chow hall was set up).

    • Dragon has a toilet. While theyâ(TM)re in the EVA suits, acclimating our space walking, yes, theyâ(TM)re wearing nappies.

  • The must be a more cost-effective way to get rid of them.
  • by Eunomion ( 8640039 ) on Tuesday September 10, 2024 @07:14PM (#64778519)
    "SpaceX launches a billionaire..." That billionaire (all of $2B in total wealth) is raising money for a children's cancer charity, and financing development of technology that would otherwise have to involve to taxpayer money for the mandated current federal space program.
    • by 0xG ( 712423 )

      A bit gullible to buy the 'charity' spin. He's doing it for himself.

      • A fact is not a "spin," dumbass. Polaris Dawn was a charity flight. As was the previous spaceflight he funded, Inspiration 4. Your attempt to read the man's mind and motives contrary to his literal behavior is idiotic and irrelevant.
  • Of course I'd have preferred an authentic astronaut experience, but if i was a billionaire instead yes i would cosplay as an astronaut.
  • I hope it goes better than that submarine adventure.

This is clearly another case of too many mad scientists, and not enough hunchbacks.

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