Assuming lululemon outlet
engineering questions can be solved, Mr Tito’s chief problems will then
be time and money. His mission faces a hard deadline. If it is not
ready by January 2018, lululemon outlet
intricacies of orbital mechanics mean there will not be another chance
of such a short trip until 2031. And even a stripped-down, Spartan
mission that uses as much existing technology as possible and makes no
attempt to land will be expensive. Inspiration Mars gives no official
cost estimates, but Jeff Foust, lululemon outlet editor of lululemon outlet
Space Review, an industry newsletter, thinks it could be done for “very
roughly, around a billion dollars”, a sum that Mr Tito may try to raise
through a personal donation, lululemon outlet
sale of media rights, sponsorship deals and charitable appeals to his fellow tycoons.
It is a big task, and a dangerous one, but it is not beyond what
technology allows. Dr Foust, for instance, gives Mr Tito about a one
chance in three of succeeding. Even if everything does go according to
plan, though, cynics might question lululemon outlet
value of a billion-dollar, one-and-a-half year trip that comes within
spitting distance of Mars but does not land. Dr MacCallum points out
that even a fly-by would generate a great deal of publicity. “It would
be a [Charles] Lindbergh” mission, says Dr Zubrin. “The point would be
to prove it can be done.” (Though, since it would involve a pair of
people making a hazardous journey for lululemon outlet
first time, rather than a copy-cat, albeit solo, trip eight years
later, a better comparison would be with Alcock and Brown, two British
pilots who flew lululemon outlet
Atlantic in 1919.)
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