Aurora Space Station

Aurora Space Station
Station statistics
Crew Crew: 2
Tourists: 4
Launch 2021 (conceptual)
Carrier rocket TBD
Mission status Concept
Length 13.3 m (44 ft)
Width 4.3 m (14 ft)
Pressurised volume 160 m3 (5,700 cu ft)
Typical orbit altitude 320 km (200 mi)
Orbital period 90 min


The Aurora Space Station is a technology concept for a private commercial space station in low Earth orbit that was announced on 5 March 2018 by Orion Span, a startup aerospace company in California, USA. The concept envisions a capacity of six people: two crew and four tourists.[1][2]

No launch contract has been signed for deployment of the modules nor crewed vehicles,[1][3] and its construction has not started,[3] but its representatives claim it will be launched in 2021.[1]

Overview

Frank Bunger, the founder and CEO of Orion Span, stated that the Aurora Station would offer to space tourists a 12-day stay for USD$9.5 million.[1][2] He said that the design concept is such that the station would not require extravehicular activities (spacewalks) for assembly and operation. Orion Span plans to design, test and build the station in Houston, Texas. [1] The company has yet to sign a launch contract, but stated that this commercial station would be deployed in low Earth orbit in 2021,[1] and start to receive passengers in 2022.[2] Bunger said that travelers will be required to complete a three-month training program before launch.[2] Guests would be able to free-float, look out windows, practice hydroponics, and play in a 'hologram deck'.[4]

See also

References

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