US Entrepreneur Set To Be The First Female Space Tourist

spaceSpace Tourism sure is definitely on a full-swing, as it gains popularity among those who can particularly afford it. From businessmen to pop stars (remember Lance Bass of N’sync?), we just might soon have the first female space tourist.

US Entrepreneur Anousheh Ansari – who’s been speculated months ago to possibly be the first female space tourist – has her eyes set on a possible 2008 flight to the International Space Station (ISS). She has spent the last few months training as a backup spaceflyer for Japanese businessman Daisuke Enomoto for its September 14 launch. The Japanese tycoon is reportedly paying $20 million for a 10-day roundtrip to the orbital laboratory.

Keeping in mind that she needs all the preparation she can get for her awaited mission, Ansari gladly jumped at the opportunity offered to her by Space Adventures officials to be Enomoto’s backup. “IÂ’m mentally prepared to do that and it would be a great personal experience,” says Ansari on her being a backup. But inasmuch as it may give her that one step closer to her goal of setting off to space, she would rather bide her time, and just do the necessary preparations for her trip. “But for my flight I have a lot of projects that IÂ’d like to do, and if I fly now that means that none of those projects would be there.”

U.S. businessman and former Microsoft software developer Charles Simonyi goes ahead Ansari in the exclusive list of space tourists after signing a contract with Russian space officials to fly toward the ISS in Spring 2007, which would be on the next Soyuz to fly after Enomoto launches with the ISS Expedition 14 Crew.

Via space

spaceSpace Tourism sure is definitely on a full-swing, as it gains popularity among those who can particularly afford it. From businessmen to pop stars (remember Lance Bass of N’sync?), we just might soon have the first female space tourist.

US Entrepreneur Anousheh Ansari – who’s been speculated months ago to possibly be the first female space tourist – has her eyes set on a possible 2008 flight to the International Space Station (ISS). She has spent the last few months training as a backup spaceflyer for Japanese businessman Daisuke Enomoto for its September 14 launch. The Japanese tycoon is reportedly paying $20 million for a 10-day roundtrip to the orbital laboratory.

Keeping in mind that she needs all the preparation she can get for her awaited mission, Ansari gladly jumped at the opportunity offered to her by Space Adventures officials to be Enomoto’s backup. “IÂ’m mentally prepared to do that and it would be a great personal experience,” says Ansari on her being a backup. But inasmuch as it may give her that one step closer to her goal of setting off to space, she would rather bide her time, and just do the necessary preparations for her trip. “But for my flight I have a lot of projects that IÂ’d like to do, and if I fly now that means that none of those projects would be there.”

U.S. businessman and former Microsoft software developer Charles Simonyi goes ahead Ansari in the exclusive list of space tourists after signing a contract with Russian space officials to fly toward the ISS in Spring 2007, which would be on the next Soyuz to fly after Enomoto launches with the ISS Expedition 14 Crew.

Via space

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