How much does a zero gravity flight cost?

Book The Zero-G Experience® now for $7500 + 5% tax per person. Each ticket includes 15 parabolas, your own Zero-G flight suit, Zero-G merchandise, Regravitation Celebration, certificate of weightless completion, photos, and video of your unique experience.

Can you take a zero gravity flight?

The ZERO-G Experience® is an amazing opportunity to experience true weightlessness. ZERO-G’s modified Boeing 727-200, G-FORCE ONE®, performs parabolic arcs to create a weightless environment allowing you to float, flip and soar as if you were in space.

Is there a place where you can experience zero gravity?

No Astronaut Experience Required. Experience zero-gravity in a uniquely personal way. Our newest zero-g adventure takes place across the state from the Kennedy Space Center, at the Aurora Aerospace Training Center in St Petersburg, Florida.

How long does a zero gravity flight last?

How Long Will I Feel Weightless? The flight portion of a Zero-G Experience® lasts approximately 90 to 100 minutes. During the flight 15 parabolas are performed each providing about 30 seconds of reduced gravity or weightlessness.

How much is a ticket on the Vomit Comet?

The $5,400 fee buys a ride in a mostly windowless jet that repeatedly climbs to 35,000 feet, then swoops down to 19,000, temporarily allowing passengers to hover upside down, float around the cabin, and otherwise act like space travelers.

Can you go on the Vomit Comet?

Non-astronauts are welcome on the “vomit comet.” Painful-looking new suntans: just back from the islands. They’re customers of Ballston-based Zero Gravity Corporation, which gives civilians the opportunity to ride in a space-simulation airplane like the one that NASA recruits once dubbed the “vomit comet.”

Can civilians ride the Vomit Comet?

Does NASA have a zero gravity room?

Contrary to popular belief, NASA does not have “anti-gravity chambers” where people can float around like astronauts on the space station. But we do use several facilities to recreate the weightless, or microgravity, conditions of orbit.

How does weightlessness affect the human body?

One of the major effects of weightlessness that is more long-term is the loss of muscle and bone mass. In the absence of gravity there is no weight load on the back and leg muscles, so they begin to weaken and shrink. Even destruction and construction processes of bones change when in space.