Suborbital space tourism is becoming a reality. The suborbital space industry is predicted to grow from $340 billion to $1 trillion over the next 20 years. A literature review, conducted on references from 2012 to 2019, identified five factors associated with the development and management of safe and effective suborbital space tourism. This paper summarizes the aspects of demand, ticket cost, motivation and risk, health risk, and policy, and how each influences the development and management of suborbital space toursim
In the euphoria of the early 1980\u27s, a number of creative proposals for nontraditional uses of ...
Companies including Virgin Galactic, Rocketship Tours, Space Adventures, Benson Dream Chaser, and EA...
The nature of suborbital space flight activities inherently involves multiple regimes of regulation ...
With the launch of Dennis Tito aboard a Russian Soyuz rocket in 2001 and SpaceShipOne winning the An...
Sparked by the achievements of Scaled Composites with their SpaceShipOne flights in 2004, a study wa...
In December of 2004, RIT Professor C.J. Wallington and students in the space tourism development cou...
This report investigates research opportunities in manned suborbital flights and gives future recomme...
When SpaceShipOne won the Ansari X-Prize in 2004, it launched the commercial space tourism industry....
Purpose: There is limited research on the behavior of different categories of space tourists as iden...
Suborbital space tourism involves flight in an air vehicle to an altitude exceeding 100 kilometers (...
Recent surveys have provided new and updated information into public insights of the nascent space t...
The general enthusiasm aroused by space tourism combined with the great technological achievement of...
51st International Astronautical Congress Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, October 2-6, 2000.This paper summ...
In April 2002, the aptly named South African, Mark Shuttleworth, became the world\u27s second space ...
Recent years have seen the emergence of the astrotourist following the $20 million trip by Dennis Ti...
In the euphoria of the early 1980\u27s, a number of creative proposals for nontraditional uses of ...
Companies including Virgin Galactic, Rocketship Tours, Space Adventures, Benson Dream Chaser, and EA...
The nature of suborbital space flight activities inherently involves multiple regimes of regulation ...
With the launch of Dennis Tito aboard a Russian Soyuz rocket in 2001 and SpaceShipOne winning the An...
Sparked by the achievements of Scaled Composites with their SpaceShipOne flights in 2004, a study wa...
In December of 2004, RIT Professor C.J. Wallington and students in the space tourism development cou...
This report investigates research opportunities in manned suborbital flights and gives future recomme...
When SpaceShipOne won the Ansari X-Prize in 2004, it launched the commercial space tourism industry....
Purpose: There is limited research on the behavior of different categories of space tourists as iden...
Suborbital space tourism involves flight in an air vehicle to an altitude exceeding 100 kilometers (...
Recent surveys have provided new and updated information into public insights of the nascent space t...
The general enthusiasm aroused by space tourism combined with the great technological achievement of...
51st International Astronautical Congress Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, October 2-6, 2000.This paper summ...
In April 2002, the aptly named South African, Mark Shuttleworth, became the world\u27s second space ...
Recent years have seen the emergence of the astrotourist following the $20 million trip by Dennis Ti...
In the euphoria of the early 1980\u27s, a number of creative proposals for nontraditional uses of ...
Companies including Virgin Galactic, Rocketship Tours, Space Adventures, Benson Dream Chaser, and EA...
The nature of suborbital space flight activities inherently involves multiple regimes of regulation ...