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SpaceX To Announce First Round-The-Moon Passenger

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Changes to the design of the SpaceX Big Falcon Rocket may make moonshot space tourism a reality. SpaceX, the private space exploration and transport company…
Changes to the design of the SpaceX Big Falcon Rocket may make moonshot space tourism a reality.
SpaceX, the private space exploration and transport company started by billionaire PayPal founder Elon Musk, announced Thursday that it has signed a contract with a space tourist for its first trip around the moon and back, according to CNN. Musk had originally announced that the first space tourist to fly around the moon would get there with the help of the Falcon Heavy rocket designed by the company, but then changed the plan, stating that he did not recommend the Falcon Heavy for human flight certification because the upcoming Big Falcon Rocket (BFR, as it is commonly called) would be a better fit for the mission. The BFR was originally designed with the concept of Mars exploration in mind, but its design is flexible enough to accommodate more local trips, like around the moon or even from one point on earth to another, according to Space.com. The website also states that the final vehicle is expected to have 40 cabins and be capable of transporting 100 people from Earth to the moon and back.
The tweet sent out from the official SpaceX Twitter account showed a rendering of a space shuttle-like craft (the spaceship portion of the BFR assembly, also known as the BFS) with seven engines appearing to circumnavigate the moon.
SpaceX has signed the world’s first private passenger to fly around the Moon aboard our BFR launch vehicle—an important step toward enabling access for everyday people who dream of traveling to space. Find out who’s flying and why on Monday, September 17. pic.twitter.com/64z4rygYhk
— SpaceX (@SpaceX) September 14,2018
SpaceX didn’t identify who the passenger is, saying that they will make that announcement on Monday, September 17. When someone asked Musk on Twitter if it was him, he merely responded with a cryptic image of a Japanese flag, perhaps hinting that the first passenger will be from that country. If so, Forbes has compiled data that shows there are 34 Japanese-born billionaires living in that country. It is assumed that anyone chartering a round-the-moon flight for a single person would have to be a billionaire.

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