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posted by martyb on Saturday September 15 2018, @03:49AM   Printer-friendly
from the queue-up-some-Pink-Floyd-for-the-journey dept.

After a previously planned flight around the Moon using a Falcon Heavy fizzled out, SpaceX has announced that it will send a private passenger around the Moon using a BFR launch vehicle. More details will be announced on Monday:

On Thursday evening, without any advance notice, SpaceX tweeted that is had signed the world's "first private passenger to fly around the Moon aboard our BFR launch vehicle." Moreover, the company promised to reveal "who's flying and why" on Monday, September 17. The announcement will take place at the company's headquarters in Hawthorne, Calif.

There were only two other clues—tweets from Elon Musk himself. Was the rendering of the Big Falcon Spaceship in SpaceX's tweet new? Yes, Musk said. And was he the passenger? In response to this, the founder of SpaceX simply tweeted a Japanese flag emoji. This would seem to be a strong clue that the passenger is from Japan. Or maybe Musk was enjoying the epic Seven Samurai movie at that moment.

By announcing this on Thursday, and waiting four days to provide more details, the company has set off a big guessing game as to who will fly. Of course that is an interesting question, but we have many other questions that we'd like to see answered before that. We've included some of those questions below, along with some wild and (slightly) informed guesses. Musk even answered one of them for us.

The design of the BFS has apparently changed to include three prominent fins and an underside heat shield.

Related: How to Get Back to the Moon in 4 Years, Permanently
SpaceX to Launch Five Times in April, Test BFR by 2019
SpaceX to Begin BFR Production at the Port of Los Angeles
2020s to Become the Decade of Lunar Re-Exploration


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  • (Score: 2) by isostatic on Saturday September 15 2018, @01:47PM (1 child)

    by isostatic (365) on Saturday September 15 2018, @01:47PM (#735291) Journal

    Sorry SpaceX, you already got the wow from the Falcon-Heavy announcement.

    My next level on the "wow a moon shot" track will be BFR having a successful orbit and return

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  • (Score: 2) by takyon on Saturday September 15 2018, @03:50PM

    by takyon (881) <reversethis-{gro ... s} {ta} {noykat}> on Saturday September 15 2018, @03:50PM (#735310) Journal

    Falcon Heavy was a bit of a wasted effort maybe. Falcon 9 will remain the vehicle of choice for most customers, and BFR will eventually replace everything. FH is a nice way to use up those rapidly accumulating boosters though.

    More to the point, SpaceX doesn't have plans to "human rate" Falcon Heavy. And its performance will be worse than BFR for this kind of mission. I think the hope here is that BFR/BFS can do this without requiring in-orbit refueling.

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