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According to media reports, the Axiom passengers each paid around 55 million dollars (about 50 million euros) for the flight. Founded in 2016 in Houston, Texas by former NASA manager Michael Suffredini and Iranian-American entrepreneur Kam Ghaffarian, Axiom Space sees itself as a future major player in the space market. It is planning its own commercial space station and has already been commissioned by NASA to build a commercial ISS module.
Commander López-Alegría, who works for Axiom Space, emphasized in advance that they do not see themselves as “space tourists”. “I think space tourism has an important role to play, but that’s not the point here. This is definitely not a vacation for my crew members.”
Experiments as a “fig leaf”?
Some scientists doubt that. “I would say that more than 80 percent of the mission is about the private pleasure of the participants, and less than 20 percent is about science,” said Ulrich Walter, professor of space technology at the Technical University in Munich , the German Press Agency. “The Axiom participants will not be allowed to do the really important experiments.”
The experiments planned by the Axiom pilots should be seen more as a kind of “fig leaf”, said Walter, but also emphasized: “I don’t mean that in a derogatory way. I’m a fan of space tourism. This shows that many people would actually be able to fly into space.” The visitors would probably not disturb the ISS astronauts either. “There is enough space and the rosters are not too tight either.”
Among other things, the Axiom pilots will meet the German astronaut Matthias Maurer on the ISS, who has been at the station since November and is scheduled to stay until the end of April. The US astronauts Thomas Marshburn, Raja Chari and Kayla Barron and the three cosmonauts Oleg Artemyev, Denis Matveyev and Sergey Korsakov are also currently working on the ISS.
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