FP StaffSep 16, 2021 11:02:39 IST
The four people on SpaceX’s first private flight are fairly ordinary, down-to-Earth types brought together by chance. The four passengers are supposed to embody the opening-up of space to everyone, giving the mission its name: Inspiration4.
They’ll circle Earth for three days at an unusually high altitude — on their own without a professional escort — before splashing down off the Florida coast.
A billionaire, Jared Isaacman, is behind the project. It was he who chartered the mission, at his own expense, inviting three anonymous people to join him, via a rather original selection process. Each seat has been assigned to represent a specific value.
Meet the crew that’s taking space tourism to new heights following Wednesday night’s launch from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center:
Jared Issacman — sponsor and billionaire pilot
Isaacman struck it rich with the payment-processing business he started in his parents’ basement after quitting high school. He later went to an aeronautical university, took to the skies in fighter jets and started Draken International to provide military-style training in tactical aircraft.
The 38-year-old American is the founder and CEO of Shift4 Payments, which offers stores and restaurants a service for processing bank card transactions. He created it when he was 16, from the basement of the family home.
Passionate about piloting, he holds a record for flying around the world in a light jet and is qualified to fly several military aircraft. In 2012, he founded a company providing training to US Air Force pilots, called Draken International.
A married father of two daughters, he has always been passionate about space exploration.
Space beckoned, and the Easton, Pennsylvania, entrepreneur purchased an entire flight from SpaceX to circle the Earth. The 38-year-old considers flying in air shows, his other hobby, as way more dangerous.
“I don’t consider myself like a risk-taker or a thrill-seeker,” says Isaacman, whose daughters are 7 and 5. “I try to seek out what I think are interesting challenges in life and, when I can, I tether it with a very worthwhile cause.”
This time it’s St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital. Isaacman has pledged $100 million to St. Jude and is seeking another $100 million in public donations. To drive home the message that space is for “just everyday people,” Isaacman offered one of the four capsule seats to St. Jude and held sweepstakes for the other two.
In 2008, he witnessed the takeoff, aboard a Russian rocket in Kazakhstan, of one of the first private tourists to visit the International Space Station, Richard Garriott. It was after that experience that he contacted SpaceX.
His seat represents “leadership.”
Hayley Arceneaux, St Jude’s representative
Now a physician assistant at St. Jude, Arceneaux was a bone cancer patient at the Memphis, Tennessee, hospital at age 10.
Arceneaux was treated for bone cancer as a child at St. Jude’s Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee, for which Jared Isaacman organized a fundraiser.
To save her left leg, St. Jude replaced her knee and part of her thigh bone, implanting a titanium rod. She’s the first person with a prosthesis in space and, at age 29, the youngest American.
She was St. Jude’s runaway choice in January as the hospital’s representative in space. Arceneaux kept up with her fellow passengers in training, even while trudging up Washington’s Mount Rainier in the snow.
Her only compromise: SpaceX adjusted her capsule seat to relieve knee pain. “I’m so excited about opening space travel up to so many, so many different kinds of people and those that aren’t physically perfect,” Arceneaux says.
She’ll chat with St. Jude patients from orbit, reminding them that their dreams, too, can come true. She’s taken along her late father’s St. Jude tie, a prized possession. “I am so thankful for my journey with cancer because it gave me a love for life, just a zest for life and the confidence to say ‘yes’ to opportunities,” she says. “This is the biggest honor of my life.”
At 29, she will be the youngest American to be sent into orbit around the Earth, and the first person with a prosthesis to go into space.
She will be the medical manager for the mission. Her seat represents “hope.”
Chris Sembroski, Raffle winner
Sembroski, an Air Force veteran who served in Iraq and data engineer for Lockheed Martin in Everett, Washington, always saw himself as the space booster behind the scenes, helping to educate the public.
He shot off model rockets in college and worked as a Space Camp counselor. So he considered it a “crazy fantasy” when he saw the Super Bowl ad in February announcing the space seat raffle and made a donation to enter.
He didn’t win but a college friend did, and he offered Sembroski his spot on the flight. Sembroski says he was more subdued than others when he found out: “Just no words were coming out. Since then, I’ve gotten a lot more enthusiastic.”
After six months of training, Sembroski, 42, has “no worries, no concerns, maybe a little bit of stage fright” about singing and playing ukulele in orbit that will be auctioned off to support St. Jude.
His schoolteacher wife, Erin, is “more than anxious about it for the two of us.” They have two daughters, ages 3 and 9. Sembroski says he’ll reflect on the historic nature of the flight — and his role in it — once he’s back on Earth.
His seat represents “generosity.” His role will be to help in managing the cargo on board, and communications with Earth.
Sian Proctor, Business winner
Proctor applied to NASA three times to become an astronaut. Born in Guam, her father worked at NASA during the Apollo missions. She participated in an experiment in Hawaii simulating life on Mars.
The 51-year-old geologist and community college professor from Tempe, Arizona, actually made it to the finals more than a decade ago. After striking out with NASA, she set her sights on private spaceflight.
In 2009, she was among a few dozen finalists out of more than 3,500 candidates.
But as 2021 loomed, she thought she’d aged out — until she learned of Isaacman’s space sweepstakes for his clients. She’d begun creating space-themed artwork when the coronavirus pandemic struck and turned to Isaacman’s Shift4 company to sell her paintings.
When asked on the eve of launch if she was nervous, she said her only worry was that “this moment would never come in my life.”
As only the fourth Black woman in space after three NASA astronauts, Proctor hopes to inspire other minority women. “As we move to the moon and Mars and beyond, we’re writing the narrative of human spaceflight right now” by focusing on diversity,
Proctor says. “We’re on Starship Earth and we want to bring everybody along with us.” She caught the space bug early: Her late father worked at NASA’s tracking station in Guam during the Apollo moon landings.
She is the pilot of the mission, assisting the commander.
She won her seat, which represents “prosperity,” by creating an online sales site linked to space, as part of an entrepreneurial competition organized by Isaacman’s company.
With inputs from AP and AFP
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