New development in NASA’s ISS tourism project!

NASA has had a new development in the ISS turmi project. The company announced that it has postponed the trip that will take place in February.
 New development in NASA’s ISS tourism project!
READING NOW New development in NASA’s ISS tourism project!

Three amateur astronauts eager to reach the International Space Station (ISS) will wait a little longer than they would like, as NASA has shifted their targeted launch date from February to the end of March.

Texas-based Axiom Space, the organizer of NASA’s first space tourism trip to the ISS, said the mission team is targeting March 31 due to additional spacecraft preparations and space station traffic.

NASA has removed the planned ISS mission from the February calendar!

The Ax-1 space tourism mission, or private astronaut mission as NASA prefers, will last about a week. The rocket to be launched will be Canadian investor and philanthropist Mark Pathy, American entrepreneur Larry Connor, former Israeli Air Force pilot Eytan Stibbe and the mission’s commander, NASA astronaut Michael López-Alegría.

The Ax-1 mission will travel aboard the Crew Dragon spacecraft, which will take four crew members to the ISS. The popular space transportation company Space X and its reliable rocket Falcon 9 will undertake the launch.

Pathy, Connor and Stibbe are said to have paid approximately $55 million per person for a space tourism trip where they will work on research and various philanthropic projects that will likely include health-related activities.

The task force continues to evolve as part of NASA and its Russian counterpart Roscosmos’ plans to commercialize the ISS to raise funds, while also increasing access to space for private citizens, even the very wealthy.

While the Ax-1 will be NASA’s first experience in overseeing a space tourism mission, Roscosmos has been conducting such missions nonstop for years. In fact, it is known that a film crew shot various shots in the ISS last year.

A tourism mission like this was last used in December when a Soyuz spacecraft used a Soyuz spacecraft to take two Japanese space tourists to the ISS, and the couple returned to Earth without any problems after spending 12 days in space.

After paying $20 million to go to the ISS in this Soyuz spacecraft, American Dennis Tito went down in world history as the first private citizen to reach space, or as NASA’s preferred name, the first private astronaut.

In addition, SpaceX is said to expand its orbital tourism trips, which send amateur astronauts into space for a few days but do not dock with the space station. We have seen a similar mission recently, with the crew of four, who went on a 3-day orbital vacation with the Crew Dragon spacecraft last September.

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