Millionaire resumes space training
Greg Olsen is back in Russia, seeking trip to orbit
![]() | Sensors Unlimited's Greg Olsen, shown in this 2004 photo, is back in training for a trip to the international space station after a yearlong, health-related suspension. |
Ed Bailey / AP file photo |
Video: Space news |
Russian spacecraft blasts off Dec. 20: Astronauts from the United States, Russia and Japan blast off to the International Space Station from Russia's remote space complex in southern Kazakhstan. |
RSS feeds on msnbc.com |
Add these headlines to your news reader |
A millionaire inventor-entrepreneur from New Jersey has resumed training in Russia for a mission to the international space station, a year after he was bumped from an earlier flight due to an unspecified health condition, the company arranging the trip announced Wednesday.
In a statement, Virginia-based Space Adventures said that Greg Olsen, founder and chief executive officer of Sensors Unlimited, was back at Russia's Gagarin Cosmonaut Training Center, outside Moscow.
The 60-year-old Olsen's health condition had been detected several weeks into his training during a routine medical examination. At the time, Russian physicians said that Olsen's training had to be suspended, but even then Space Adventures held out hope that he could eventually get into space.
"The condition has since been remedied," Space Adventures said, "and after a recent re-evaluation, Dr. Olsen has received clearance to resume cosmonaut training in preparation for an upcoming Soyuz flight to the international space station."
Exercise and Russian lessons
Stacey Tearne, a spokeswoman for Space Adventures, told MSNBC.com that Olsen returned to training on May 16 and had three or four months of work ahead of him. During the nearly yearlong break, he kept up with his cardiovascular conditioning as well as private Russian-language lessons, Tearne said.
"Everyone's excited and just so enthusiastic," Tearne said. "He's excited about the mission, and that's an inspiration to us."
Under this scenario, Olsen would return to Earth a week later alongside the Expedition 11 crew, Sergei Krikalev and John Phillips, who are currently in the midst of a six-month tour of duty in orbit.
$20 million list price
Space Adventures arranged for similar short-term trips to the space station for California millionaire Dennis Tito in 2001 and South African millionaire Mark Shuttleworth in 2002. The list price for such tours is $20 million, although both Tito and Shuttleworth are said to have paid less than that to the Russians.
Although such fliers are often called space tourists, Olsen said last year that he preferred the term "private researcher," because he intended to use his company's infrared imaging system for research aboard the space station.
It's not unusual for medical problems to turn up during Russia's cosmonaut training examinations. Pop singer Lance Bass, who was involved in an unsuccessful bid to visit the space station, was found to have a minor heart condition during his exam and had it corrected on an outpatient basis. Another unsuccessful space candidate, former NASA official Lori Garver, had to have her gall bladder removed in order to continue with her cosmonaut training.
- Discuss Story On Newsvine
-
Rate Story:
View popularLowHigh - Instant Message
MORE FROM THE NEW SPACE RACE |
| Add The New Space Race headlines to your news reader: |
Resource guide


