I want to go to the moon.

I want to go to the moon.

Author
Discussion

Turfy

Original Poster:

1,070 posts

181 months

Monday 31st August 2020
quotequote all
I'm mid-40's and I do not want to, or can't pay $m's for the privilege.

When will I be able to get onto Skyscanner (other potential Moon visit resellers are available...) and look for a short break; Spain, Las Vegas, Moon...and check the "Moon" box?

I'm not talking about a two week holiday. Just land, bounce around a bit and get back in time for dinner.

How close is an affordable day trip to the Moon (affordable in the way nice cars, houses and holidays are "affordable" to the average person)? (baring in mind a trip to Australia 100 years ago was a 6-month affair).


Mexman

2,442 posts

84 months

Monday 31st August 2020
quotequote all
I've heard there is not much atmosphere though.

croyde

22,876 posts

230 months

Monday 31st August 2020
quotequote all
You might have to wear a mask.

Brooksay

671 posts

70 months

Monday 31st August 2020
quotequote all
Rekall Rekall Rekall. Let us remember it for you. "get your ass to Mars.. Etc..

Olivergt

1,328 posts

81 months

Monday 31st August 2020
quotequote all
I doubt it in your lifetime.

If money was no object, then probably in your lifetime, but you have specifically said you don't have millions to spend.

Don't forget,we don't currently have rockets that can even get people to the moon and back.

Current cost per person to get to the Space Station is around 50 million at the moment.

https://www.space.com/spacex-boeing-commercial-cre...

Einion Yrth

19,575 posts

244 months

Monday 31st August 2020
quotequote all
It'll be a very long time before we have anything that can make the round trip in less than a week, so you can forget the "day trip" idea, even if you were richer that Croesus.

Europa1

10,923 posts

188 months

Monday 31st August 2020
quotequote all
OP, did you by any chance watch the repeat of A Grand Day Out yesterday?

Turfy

Original Poster:

1,070 posts

181 months

Monday 31st August 2020
quotequote all
No

Hereward

4,179 posts

230 months

Monday 21st September 2020
quotequote all
Wouldn't it be an amazing week. I would be happy with just an Apollo 8 fly-by experience, with maybe a low pass over the 11 landing site.

The adrenaline junkies will choose the full Apollo 13 experience.

Talksteer

4,858 posts

233 months

Monday 21st September 2020
quotequote all
Olivergt said:
I doubt it in your lifetime.

If money was no object, then probably in your lifetime, but you have specifically said you don't have millions to spend.

Don't forget,we don't currently have rockets that can even get people to the moon and back.

Current cost per person to get to the Space Station is around 50 million at the moment.

https://www.space.com/spacex-boeing-commercial-cre...
Yusaku Maezawa has bought a free return trajectory flight to the Moon this decade.

We know that the flight must have cost considerably less than his $2 billion net worth. If we have an upper bound of $1 billion and a lower bound of $150 million then that puts the per seat cost at around $100-15 million per seat, I would estimate a 2025 date.

If we then take some reasonable approximations for Starship costs:

I doubt that the first generation Starships will last more than 10 missions without maintenance equal to construction. Despite Elon's claim that they will be super cheap I will also ascribe a cost per dry tonne of $1 million which is about what an airliner costs.

Cost for each launch paperwork, fuel and paying the bills for SpaceXs payroll will be $5 million. That comes to $30 million a launch ($250 million/10 for vehicle) and you will need 2 to do a flyby and 7 to land.

You will however be able to share the launch with around 100 other people. So that comes to ~$600,000 to do a flyby and $2.1 million to land. This would be around 2030-35 ish.

If after a few years the vehicle manages 100 flights per heavy maintenance and we halve the per launch costs while doubling the passenger numbers we get to $5 million a launch and 200 people.

So we are down to about $50k to flyby and $175k to land. I'd estimate that the earliest this is happening is 2035-40.

From that point onwards space tourism is likely to trend towards being 2-6 times the cost of the energy required like all other forms of transport. Which would put the minimum cost of the flyby in the region of $10k.

All that I'm doing is restating what advocates of reusable space craft have been saying since the 60's. If you can reuse the space craft the cost of fuel isn't that high your flights can be cheap if you can get the launch rates up.

So far we know that we can do reusability, we don't know if we can get demand for launches up. SpaceX hasn't for example stimulated more launches with their low prices. Instead they have created their own demand with space internet.

However we are a long way from having enough stuff to fill multiple reusable Starships. You would only need 20-30 launches a year to support a 40,000 satellite global constellation.

Space tourism may have the potential to drive greater volumes of flights however the sticking point is likely to be that at the moment spaceflight carries a significant risk of killing you. Spacecraft are delicate and don't have mass to allocate to robustness or redundancy (safety is never built on just reliability).

It may be that we need a significant technology change to really make spaceflight a mass market endeavour. It may be that environmental concerns put a ceiling on how many launches we can have and that stops the price falling.

In summary I would suggest that if you really want to it may be possible to go into space either as a trip of a lifetime (or end of lifetime) or as paid professional in the burgeoning space tourism market.

I doubt very much that we will see settlement of Mars, I suspect that the experience would be more akin to a long stretch in the world's harshest prison whereas I can see the rich and famous hanging out in low earth orbit or at the moon.

Ultimately all the world's endeavours are a bid to impress the opposite sex.

Alias218

1,495 posts

162 months

Monday 21st September 2020
quotequote all
Try this first and see if you like it:

https://www.kerbalspaceprogram.com/

I heard it’s made from cheese.

Olivergt

1,328 posts

81 months

Tuesday 22nd September 2020
quotequote all
Talksteer said:
Olivergt said:
I doubt it in your lifetime.

If money was no object, then probably in your lifetime, but you have specifically said you don't have millions to spend.

Don't forget,we don't currently have rockets that can even get people to the moon and back.

Current cost per person to get to the Space Station is around 50 million at the moment.

https://www.space.com/spacex-boeing-commercial-cre...
Yusaku Maezawa has bought a free return trajectory flight to the Moon this decade.

We know that the flight must have cost considerably less than his $2 billion net worth. If we have an upper bound of $1 billion and a lower bound of $150 million then that puts the per seat cost at around $100-15 million per seat, I would estimate a 2025 date.

...
So you are saying that in 5 years time, there will be spacecraft going to the moon, maybe not landing, but going there and back.

I'm not quite sure what the point would be of just doing flybys though?

5 years is not very long in space flight timescales, so you have references for the space craft that they might be using? I would have thought that the planning and even construction/testing would have started by now to achieve a 2025 launch date.

mikal83

5,340 posts

252 months

Tuesday 22nd September 2020
quotequote all
I want to be frozen then thawed out 500 years in the future.......

Terminator X

15,054 posts

204 months

Tuesday 22nd September 2020
quotequote all
Can't see it ever being for the plebs, there is no tech currently imaginable that will make going to the moon cheap like a plane journey.

TX.

Slackline

411 posts

134 months

Tuesday 22nd September 2020
quotequote all
Talksteer said:
Yusaku Maezawa has bought a free return trajectory flight to the Moon this decade.

We know that the flight must have cost considerably less than his $2 billion net worth. If we have an upper bound of $1 billion and a lower bound of $150 million then that puts the per seat cost at around $100-15 million per seat, I would estimate a 2025 date.

If we then take some reasonable approximations for Starship costs:

I doubt that the first generation Starships will last more than 10 missions without maintenance equal to construction. Despite Elon's claim that they will be super cheap I will also ascribe a cost per dry tonne of $1 million which is about what an airliner costs.

Cost for each launch paperwork, fuel and paying the bills for SpaceXs payroll will be $5 million. That comes to $30 million a launch ($250 million/10 for vehicle) and you will need 2 to do a flyby and 7 to land.

You will however be able to share the launch with around 100 other people. So that comes to ~$600,000 to do a flyby and $2.1 million to land. This would be around 2030-35 ish.

If after a few years the vehicle manages 100 flights per heavy maintenance and we halve the per launch costs while doubling the passenger numbers we get to $5 million a launch and 200 people.

So we are down to about $50k to flyby and $175k to land. I'd estimate that the earliest this is happening is 2035-40.

From that point onwards space tourism is likely to trend towards being 2-6 times the cost of the energy required like all other forms of transport. Which would put the minimum cost of the flyby in the region of $10k.

All that I'm doing is restating what advocates of reusable space craft have been saying since the 60's. If you can reuse the space craft the cost of fuel isn't that high your flights can be cheap if you can get the launch rates up.

So far we know that we can do reusability, we don't know if we can get demand for launches up. SpaceX hasn't for example stimulated more launches with their low prices. Instead they have created their own demand with space internet.

However we are a long way from having enough stuff to fill multiple reusable Starships. You would only need 20-30 launches a year to support a 40,000 satellite global constellation.

Space tourism may have the potential to drive greater volumes of flights however the sticking point is likely to be that at the moment spaceflight carries a significant risk of killing you. Spacecraft are delicate and don't have mass to allocate to robustness or redundancy (safety is never built on just reliability).

It may be that we need a significant technology change to really make spaceflight a mass market endeavour. It may be that environmental concerns put a ceiling on how many launches we can have and that stops the price falling.

In summary I would suggest that if you really want to it may be possible to go into space either as a trip of a lifetime (or end of lifetime) or as paid professional in the burgeoning space tourism market.

I doubt very much that we will see settlement of Mars, I suspect that the experience would be more akin to a long stretch in the world's harshest prison whereas I can see the rich and famous hanging out in low earth orbit or at the moon.

Ultimately all the world's endeavours are a bid to impress the opposite sex.
Did anyone else read this in the voice of Bricktop? biggrin

Eric Mc

121,987 posts

265 months

Wednesday 23rd September 2020
quotequote all
Olivergt said:
So you are saying that in 5 years time, there will be spacecraft going to the moon, maybe not landing, but going there and back.

I'm not quite sure what the point would be of just doing flybys though?
There are people who would be willing to do it. Plenty of "experiences" that people pay for don't involve stopping en route and getting out of the vehicle.

MiniMan64

16,917 posts

190 months

Wednesday 23rd September 2020
quotequote all
NASA have just said that the Artemis program is going to cost $28b over the next 5 years.

Seems like good value to me given what they spend on everything else over there.

Beati Dogu

8,887 posts

139 months

Wednesday 23rd September 2020
quotequote all
Slackline said:
Did anyone else read this in the voice of Bricktop? biggrin
Punish 'im for me Elon !

Toaster

2,939 posts

193 months

Wednesday 23rd September 2020
quotequote all
Mexman said:
I've heard there is not much atmosphere though.
I know several pubs like that

Toaster

2,939 posts

193 months

Wednesday 23rd September 2020
quotequote all
mikal83 said:
I want to be frozen then thawed out 500 years in the future.......
You will be lonely there won't be anyone left Man will have killed off the environment by then