News
Arizona-based World View Enterprises aims to start launching paying customers to the stratosphere in 2017 beneath a giant balloon, for $75,000 per seat. Passengers will spend two hours at an ...
World View shared a copy of a letter from the Federal Aviation Administration saying that the company's six passenger, two pilot gondola will qualify as a space vehicle because the conditions at ...
Group Captain Shubhanshu Shukla, the first Indian astronaut at the ISS, has captivated the world with stunning Earth images.
Witness live views of Earth from the International Space Station as it orbits the planet. Space streaming company Sen is broadcasting 24/7 from the ISS in beautiful 4K HD.
A new observatory in Chile has produced a stunningly detailed image of a nebula resembling cotton candy, using the largest ...
To learn more about World View, visit worldview.space. About World View. World View is a leading global stratospheric exploration company, founded in 2012 and headquartered in Tucson, Arizona.
World View was spun off roughly a decade ago from another private Tucson company, Paragon Space Development Corp., which manufactures life support systems and thermal controls. Paragon makes World ...
World View Enterprises completed the first launch of one of its stratospheric balloons Sunday morning from the Spaceport Tucson site south of the airport. The successful test flight from the ...
A restroom with an out-of-this-world view could be the surprise highlight for travelers adventuring with space tourism start-up Space Perspective.. The Florida-based company plans to take ...
World View, based in Tucson, Ariz., is packaging $50,000 trips aboard its space balloon with five-day excursions that depart from one of seven “world-wonder” sites, including the Amazon ...
However, this time we’re featuring someone raised right here in Spokane - NASA Astronaut Anne McClain because of how her world view from space has given her perspective on how people across the ...
The Fram2 will aim to circle Earth at a trajectory that is exactly 90 degrees to the equator, giving the passengers a perfect view of the North and South Poles that have remained elusive from even ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results