English, asked by harmanyadav01, 6 months ago

(a) Space adventure claims that..........
(1) it is a lucrative business.
(2) it is a business of less profit.
(3) people don't want to go to space.​

Answers

Answered by manishabadhan5282
6

Answer:

1) it is a lucrative business. is correct option.

Answered by ashutoshmishra3065
1

Answer:

Explanation:

Space adventure:

Lance Bass of NSYNC should try again in, say, ten years if he can't pay the $20 million price tag for a trip into space right away. However, after around ten years, even some of Bass's admirers could afford a swift and secure a 50–60 mile flight to the suborbital edge of space, according to Frank Seitzen, the Space Transport Association's president.

Sincere businesses that can complete the procedure for $5,000 or $10,000 are probably 10 to 12 years away, according to Seitzen.

Would-be space travellers have a voracious appetite, and a $10 million incentive is motivating designers. At least 21 space vehicle concepts from individuals in five different nations have been drawn to the X Prize, which was established in 1994 to encourage the development of innovative space travel technologies. The award will be presented by the nonprofit X Prize Foundation, which was established by a group of donors who were inspired by the $25,000 Orteig Prize that Charles Lindbergh earned in 1927.

The first reusable rocket that can carry a pilot and two to five passengers up to a height of 62 miles is what each design team is aiming to create. The NASA grants astronaut status for journeys longer than 50 kilometers.

Although the first few travellers will have to pay $100,000 until the market matures, several design contestants boast that such journeys will be accessible by 2005.

Seitzen and others are confident that a successful tourism industry is just around the corner despite high costs and outdated technologies. Travel company Space Adventures claims to have received $2 million in deposits from more than 120 potential suborbital travellers. Space Adventures assisted US billionaire Dennis Tito in organising the first tourist mission to the International Space Station last year. Suborbital travel is a frustrating, but doable, alternative to decades of trying to reach space for client Wally Funk, who has paid her deposit. "I would take (a trip to the space station) in a heartbeat, but I can't because I'm not a wealthy," says Funk, a retired aviation safety investigator.

Space adventure claims that...

it is a lucrative business.

#SPJ3

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