It just got a little easier to have that weightless feeling in
California, if you're willing to spend $3,950.
NASA Ames Research Center, based in Silicon Valley, has teamed up with
Las Vegas-based Zero Gravity (Zero-G) to host commercial flights that
allow passengers to experience several minutes of weightlessness. Under
the agreement, called the Reimbursable Space Act Agreement, NASA will
let Zero-G park its aircraft, a modified Boeing 727-200 called G-Force
One, on the Moffett airfield and take off from its runway. Under
contract with NASA, the two organizations will collaborate on research
and astronaut training this fall.
Financial terms of the agreement were not disclosed, but Zero-G will
reimburse NASA for the use of the runway and support costs.
The first Zero-G flight from Ames is scheduled for this Saturday, but
the flight is already sold out. Tickets on Zero-G's roughly 90-minute
flight cost $3,950, according to the company. It plans to book more
flights for this year. Similarly in 2006, Zero-G began flying its craft
from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. That year, it flew up to
seven flights per week.
"We are honored to be able to fly from Moffett Field and allow our
passengers the opportunity to fly like Superman and float in midair just
like NASA astronauts from an actual NASA center," Zero-G Chairman Peter
Diamandis said in a statement. |