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Dennis Tito who became the world's first space tourist in 2001. MIKHAIL METZEL/AP/Press Association Images
Mars

Tycoon wants to send couple on Mars mission

Many of the finer details of the Inspiration Mars project – initially funded by the world’s first space tourist Dennis Tito – have yet to be worked out but it is hoped it will allow for zero-gravity sex.

A TYCOON HAS announced plans to send a middle-aged couple on a privately built spaceship to slingshot around Mars and come back home, hopefully with their bodies and marriage in one piece.

The couple would spend 501 days of no-escape togetherness in a cramped capsule half the size of an RV. Under the audacious but bare-bones plan, the spacecraft would blast off less than five years from now and pass within 100 miles of the Martian surface.

The private, non-profit project, called Inspiration Mars, will get initial money from NASA engineer-turned-multimillionaire investment consultant Dennis Tito, the first space tourist.

The organisers hope to raise the rest through donations, advertising and media partnerships. The cost was not disclosed, but outsiders put it at more than $1 billion (€760 million).

The team of space veterans behind the project hasn’t quite figured out the technical details of the rocket they will use or the capsule the husband-and-wife astronauts will live in during the 16-month voyage. But they know it will be an adventure not for the weak of body or heart.

“This is not going to be an easy mission,” chief technical officer and potential crew member Taber MacCallum said. “We called it the Lewis and Clark trip to Mars.”

The trying circumstances include: no showers, limits on toilet paper and clothing, drinking water made from the crew members’ recycled urine and sweat, and almost no privacy.

‘Zero-gravity sex’

But the flight also comes with never-before-seen views of Mars. And there’s ample time for zero-gravity sex in space, something NASA doesn’t like to talk about.

As for why a man and a woman will be selected, “this is very symbolic and we really need it to represent humanity,” MacCallum said.

He said if it is a man and a woman on such a long, close-quarters voyage, it makes sense for them to be married so that they can give each other the emotional support they will probably need when they look out the window and see Earth get smaller and more distant: “If that’s not scary, I don’t know what is.”

NASA, which has talked about sending astronauts to orbit Mars by the mid-2030s, will not be involved in this project.

Instead, its backers intend to use a ship built by other aerospace companies, employing an austere design that could take people to Mars for a fraction of what it would cost the space agency to do with robots, officials said.

Even though some of the hardware hasn’t even been built, Tito said he is confident everything will come together by 2018 with no test flights.

It will be a stripped-down mission when it comes to automation and complexity, meaning the couple will have to fix things on the fly like TV’s MacGyver and do more piloting than on NASA vehicles, said chief medical officer Jonathan Clark.

The flight is timed to take advantage of the once-in-a-generation close approach of the two planets’ orbits. The timeline calls for launch on 5 January 2018, the Mars flyby on 20 August 2018, and a return to Earth on 21 May 2019.

It involves huge risk, more than a government agency like NASA would normally permit, officials concede.

Hopeful couple

For example, the spaceship will fly during a period when galactic cosmic rays will be high because of the sunspot cycle. That will increase the crew’s cancer risk by about 3 per cent, which is more than on any NASA mission, Clark said.

The ship would also re-enter Earth’s atmosphere at twice the speed of ordinary space capsules, something Tito said still needs to be worked out.

“Life is risky,” said Clark, a former NASA flight surgeon whose astronaut wife died in the 2003 space shuttle Columbia accident. “Anything that’s worth it is worth putting it all at stake for.”

What may be most at stake is the crew members’ marriage. The couple will be selected within a year.

MacCallum and his wife, Jane Poynter, hope to be picked. They were a couple when they participated in Biosphere 2, a sort of giant terrarium that was supposed to replicate a mission on another planet.

Poynter said it was such a fraught experience psychologically that some participants wouldn’t talk to each other for most of the two years.

But MacCallum said it brought him and Poynter closer together. He said the right couple going to Mars, if screened and counselled ahead of time, would come back with a stronger marriage.

Poynter said the husband and wife need to be even-tempered. Clark said they should be post-childbearing age because of exposure to radiation. Poynter is 50, MacCallum 48.

For the 30 years NASA has been flying men and women, it has avoided the question of sex in space. MacCallum said it will happen: “It’s a man and wife. Private time. Let your imagination run wild.”

Read: Life on Mars? Maybe not. NASA rows back on findings

Read: Cheese! Mars Curiosity rover sends back its first high-resolution self-portrait

Author
Associated Foreign Press
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