Page 1 of 1

International Space Station or the Life Habitat module

Posted: Sun Feb 16, 2025 10:03 am
by Shishirgano9
While the excitement is focused on space travel, there are other opportunities beyond tourism, including the deployment of satellite networks needed to meet the bandwidth demands of self-driving cars and other internet-connected devices, mining raw materials from asteroids, and factories in space. Space tourism is no longer a dystopia. From astronaut detergents to 3D-printed medicines – new solutions for living in space were found at CES in Las Vegas. Space company Sierra Space is even promoting a “ space as a service” business model that will rely on cutting-edge technologies, such as the Dream Chaser® mini-space shuttles and the LIFE expandable habitats.


CES attendees were able to walk around the 30-foot-long Dream taiyuan mobile number database Chaser (sadly not inside) and its “trailer,” the Shooting Star. Together, the two craft can carry payloads of more than six tons to the, also on display. LIFE ’s inhabitants will apparently be very productive, with room to exercise on equipment, build robots, grow their own produce, and compact their waste into bricks to use as radiation shielding. While waiting for the journey to other galaxies, the company Zero G offers a weightless experience similar to that of space, without the planetary view.


Its modified Boeing 727 G-Force One flies parabolas to create 15 separate periods of 20 to 30 seconds of weightlessness. Commercial zero-G flights cost $7,500 each, and group charters are also available. The French company Air Zero-G offers the same thing from Bordeaux, this time in a modified Airbus A 310. The future of smart electric mobility Two years ago, the Japanese group Sony surprised everyone in Las Vegas with the "Vision-S" electric car. At the time, Sony did not specify whether this vehicle was intended to be tested for the sale of Sony technology or whether it was a first step towards automobile production.