Son to follow father's footsteps in space
If aspiring space tourist Richard Garriott wants advice on living in orbit, he can ask his father, a former NASA astronaut who spent two months aboard the first U.S. space station 24 years ago.
The Vienna, Virginia-based firm Space Adventures announced on Friday that it had arranged a trip for Garriott, who is the company's largest investor as well as a noted computer game developer, to the International Space Station in October 2008. The company has arranged five previous flights to the station for adventure-seeking entrepreneurs.
"I think everyone has the fantasy or the desire to travel in space," said Garriott, 46, whose family lived in the Houston area near NASA. "But for me, I grew up in an environment where not only was my dad actually going to space but both of my next-door neighbors were astronauts, the guy behind me over the fence was an astronaut. Basically, the whole neighborhood was either astronauts or engineers in support of NASA.
"I just sort of assumed that one day we would all be going to space," said Garriott, who is paying about $30 million for his trip.
The astronaut's son showed an early penchant for developing computer games and dropped out of college to devote himself full time to the endeavor, which has paid off handsomely.
"My income in the computer gaming industry superseded my dad's income as an astronaut while I was in high school," said Garriott, who developed the Ultima series and co-founded the North American subsidiary of Korea's NCsoft Corp, the world's largest online game developer and publisher.
When it came to his private life and investments, Garriott shunned the virtual world and launched himself into adventure travel, commercial space endeavors and scientific research, a passion he shares with father Owen Garriott.
The elder Garriott retired from NASA in 1986 after two spaceflights, including a two-month stay aboard Skylab, the first U.S. space station. He also held several management positions, including project scientist for the budding space station program.
Since then, father and son have traveled to the bottom of the sea to collect exotic microbes that live in hydrothermal vents and to Antarctica to hunt for meteorites.
Owen Garriott's biotech company, ExtremoZyme Inc, will be flying protein crystals for Richard to tend while in orbit and return to Earth for laboratory analysis. Microgravity is believed to enhance crystal formation, which can be used in development of new drugs and other products.
- 1 Gitanjali Group appoints Katrina Kaif as Nakshatra brand ambassador,sets sight on business expansion
- 2 Airtel to begin selling 3G iPhone from August 22, Vodafone silent
- 3 Murdoch unveils India Titans 30 Index to track stock market performance of blue chip cos.
- 4 Joy of Birth: Woman clones puppies from late pit bull terrier
- 5 Fantastic acrobatic ballet: Swan Lake
- 6 We are ready for the game
- 7 UB Group sets aside Rs.1000 crore as capex to increase brewing capacity
- 1 India's inflation rate surges past 12 percent, credit tightening seen
- 2 ITC Q1 net profit drops 4.4 percent on excise duty hike on cigarettes, outlook positive
- 3 Direct tax collections rise 47 percent in April-July period of FY09
- 4 Shiv-Vani bags Rs.1610 crore order from ONGC for deployment of onshore oil rigs
- 5 Airtel to begin selling 3G iPhone from August 22, Vodafone silent
- 6 Videocon Industries net profit rises 4 percent in Q3, eyes business expansion
- 7 Gitanjali Group appoints Katrina Kaif as Nakshatra brand ambassador,sets sight on business expansion
- 1 Lenovo says quarterly profits up 65 percent
- 2 Airtel to begin selling 3G iPhone from August 22, Vodafone silent
- 3 Dell is going greener
- 4 Review: With 10-inch screen, Eee PC grows up
- 5 Big Yahoo shareholder demands review of board vote
- 6 Martian soil may contain detrimental substance
- 7 Sun 4Q profit falls 73 pct, guidance hurts stock
|
|




















