Curiosmos
  • Home
  • Unsolved Mysteries
  • Ancient Civilizations
  • Cosmic Phenomena
  • Alien Theories
  • Curious Lists
No Result
View All Result
Like us on Facebook
Curiosmos
  • Home
  • Unsolved Mysteries
  • Ancient Civilizations
  • Cosmic Phenomena
  • Alien Theories
  • Curious Lists
No Result
View All Result
Curiosmos
No Result
View All Result

Here’s How a Massive Space Balloon Could Take Tourists into Space

Justin GurkinicbyJustin Gurkinic
June 23, 2020 - Updated on January 21, 2024
in Editor's Picks
An artists illustration of what the trip to Space with the Neptune spacecraft may look like. Image Credit: Space Perspective.

An artists illustration of what the trip to Space with the Neptune spacecraft may look like. Image Credit: Space Perspective.

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

A recent project aims to combine space and tourism faster than ever. Space Perspective wants to send people into space with the help of their Neptune spacecraft, a flight system composed of a massive balloon and capsule that could carry up to eight tourists into space.


Who wouldn’t want to admire the beauty of our planet from space?

Today, only a select group of astronauts have the opportunity to admire the beauty of Earth, but soon this incredible view may not bee exclusive to scientists and pilots traveling to space.

Everyone should be able to admire the beauty of our planet from space, and a company called Space Perspective may help people see just that.

Related Posts

Photograph of Nikola Tesla and King Peter II taken in 1942.

Nikola Tesla Patents: Download Tesla’s Patents Collected in a 499-page PDF

May 27, 2020 - Updated on January 8, 2025
An aerial view of Antarctica. Jumpstory.

Scientists Find 66-Million-Year-Old Football-Sized Egg Buried in Antarctica

June 19, 2020 - Updated on January 21, 2024

If you had the opportunity to go into space, would you dare to go to a place where only a select few have been? As it turns out, our first trip to space could be closer than you imagine.

Space Perspective, “a human space flight company,” is offering travelers looking for a little cosmic adrenaline, a unique opportunity to venture to the space frontier. The company has formally announced its plans to take “playing customers” into space, aboard their spaceship called Neptune.

But unlike astronauts who are strapped to a massive rocked that is flown into orbit, Space Perspective customers would be “lifted to the edge of space” with the help of a higher altitude balloon system.

Flying into space with the help of balloons may sound far-fetched to some, but Space Perspective is already planning to test out its flight systems in 2021.

The company recently introduced the world to Neptune, “a high-performance balloon, and a pressurized capsule” that will transport up to eight passengers, a pilot, and research cargoes to the outer part of the Earth’s atmosphere: the stratosphere, which stretches between 10 and 50 kilometers in altitude.

This flight, however, will not touch the border with space but will be limited to a height of 30 kilometers, enough to enjoy an exceptional view that, according to the project’s promoters, will allow us to see the curvature of the Earth.

Stratospheric tourists will be able to dress casually without putting on a spacesuit. In addition, they will have a refreshment bar, bathroom, and access to social networks available on board.

The trip is expected to last 6 hours and will be divided into three stages: two hours for the ascent to the maximum height, two hours of stay at that height, and the rest for the descent.

An artists rendering of the Neptune capsule and what future space tourists could see. Image Credit: Space Perspective.
An artist’s rendering of the Neptune capsule and what future space tourists could see. Image Credit: Space Perspective.

At the end of the trip, the passengers will end up in the ocean where the capsule will be collected by a boat to take it to the mainland.

“Everyone should be able to see Earth from space,” said Jane Poynter, one of the founders of Space Perspective, which already offers the option to sign up for the trip on its website.

Although the first official flight may not seem so close, according to reports in 2021, the company will carry out a test flight without passengers that will depart from Florida.

Poynter estimates that initially, the price could be around $125,000, although signing up, for now, costs nothing.

If the $125k price seems a bit too much, Space Perspective has announced a partnership with another Space For Humanity to try to improve accessibility to space for passengers who do not have such astronomical figures in their pockets.

In this way, groups of citizens can be sent to space through an application and sponsorship process that will significantly reduce travel costs.

Share157Tweet98Share27ShareSend
Justin Gurkinic

Justin Gurkinic

Hey, my name is Justin, and my friends call me Gurk. Why? Becuase of my last name. It sounds like a vegetable. Kind of. I love sleeping and writing. History is my thing.

Related Posts

Artist's impression of the Giant Magellan Telescope when complete. Credit: Giant Magellan Telescope – GMTO Corporation
Editor's Picks

Using Gigantic Mirrors, Astronomers Want to Observe the Edge of the Cosmos—10 Reasons Why This is Huge News

May 13, 2021 - Updated on January 21, 2024
An illustration of Baba Vanga. Curiosmos.
Editor's Picks

Baba Vanga predictions that continue to puzzle the world today

December 23, 2018 - Updated on April 17, 2025
A simulated view from the surface of Europa. Image Credit: NASA.
Editor's Picks

This NASA video lets you fly over Jupiter’s moon Europa like never before

February 15, 2019 - Updated on April 18, 2025
Ancient Egyptian wood painted sarcophagus. Shutterstock.
Editor's Picks

More than Pyramids: 5 Discoveries from Ancient Egypt You Should Know Of

July 30, 2019 - Updated on January 22, 2024
Explorers from the 24th Ukrainian Antarctic Expedition standing inside the subterranean world. Image Credit: Press Service of the Ministry of Education and Science of Ukraine.
Editor's Picks

Researchers Find a Lost Subterranean World in a Cave Beneath Antarctica

September 13, 2019 - Updated on January 21, 2024
Apollo 13 view of the surface of the moon and Earth. Image Credit: NASA.
Editor's Picks

NASA Releases Spectacular 4K Video of Apollo 13 Views of the Moon

March 11, 2020 - Updated on January 21, 2024
  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Fair Use Notice
  • DMCA / Removal
  • Impressum
  • Contact
  • Fact-Checking Policy
  • Ethics Policy
  • Ownership and Funding Information
  • Impressum
CURIOSMOS.COM

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Unsolved Mysteries
  • Ancient Civilizations
  • Cosmic Phenomena
  • Alien Theories
  • Curious Lists