


The flights will include eight passengers and a pilot in a pressurised capsule, but tickets will reportedly set space tourists back £74,000. The company posted on Twitter a video snippet from one of Resiliences cameras that captures our. "Safety is of course our highest priority, and we will be continuing our extensive testing program in the coming years, including achieving FAA (Federal Aviation Administration) certification." The view from up there is incredible, as SpaceX showed us early Thursday morning (Sept. "We plan to begin operating commercial flights in 2025 and aim to reach up to 400 commercial trips with 3,000 passengers carried per year by 2029. To stay up to date with all the latest news, make sure you sign up to one of our newsletters here. As you dine, peer out and enjoy amazing daytime and nighttime views of Earth from 220 miles up. "Astronauts have described it as a state of awe with self-transcendent qualities, precipitated by a particularly striking visual stimulus, from space. He said: "We want to give customers a life-changing experience, the overview effect - a view of the curvature of the Earth that can only be experienced starting at an altitude of 30+ kilometres.

Tickets could cost a whopping £70,000 (Image: Halo Space)
