Jared Isaacman is about to go where no billionaire has gone before. The entrepreneur is making his second trip into space, this time a “longer, more daring and riskier” journey into high-earth orbit that will include a spacewalk, said The New York Times. The journey aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule will be a “purely commercial effort” featuring a crew of private-sector astronauts; NASA has nothing to do with this trip. But all involved say this is not just a sight-seeing jaunt. “The real focus is on what we stand to gain and learn from it,” Isaacman said.
His trip is “the most ambitious — and risky — private spaceflight yet,” said Scientific American. The so-called “Polaris Dawn” journey will launch into an “ultrahigh” orbit more than 800 miles high (where no human has flown since the Apollo moon missions) to the Van Allen radiation belt that surrounds the planet, in order to test the radiation’s effect on humans. Later on, it will conduct the first-ever private spacewalk. The overriding aim to all this? To lay the groundwork for Elon Musk’s planned trip to Mars. “It’s time to go out,” said SpaceX’s Bill Gerstenmaier. “It’s time to explore.”
‘Expanding human activity in space’
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‘The inspiration side of it’
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