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British physicist Stephen Hawking (C) is
assisted as he floats during a ZERO-G flight aboard a modified Boeing 727
after taking off from the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida
April 26, 2007. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
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BEIJING, April 27 (Xinhuanet) -- U.S.
astronaut Neil Armstrong took "one small step for man" when he trod the
moon's surface 37 years ago, Thursday world-famous physicist Stephen
Hawking took a "giant leap" for Earth's physically disabled when he
experienced eight rounds of weightlessness in what he saw as the first step
in a personal goal to travel in space.
"It was amazing," Hawking told reporters afterward,
using his well-known computerized voice. "The zero-G part was wonderful, and the
high-G part was no problem. I could have gone on and on. Space, here I come.
"I have long wanted to go into space, and the
zero-gravity flight is the first step toward space travel," he said prior to the
flight.
Hawking is one of the globe's best-known
scientists because of his best-selling works on the mysteries of black
holes and the origins of the universe, and because of his increasing disability
due to a degenerative nerve disease known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. He
is almost completely paralyzed and can communicate only via facial gestures and
a gesture-controlled computer system.
Thursday's flight was a test run find out if Hawking
is capable of a rocket-powered journey to the edge of outer space,
perhaps aboard the spaceship now being developed for Virgin Galactic. That craft
is due to enter service in 2009 or so, and taking such a flight would check off
what Hawking has said is his "next goal."
Hawking's host, Zero Gravity Corp. co-founder and
chief executive officer Peter Diamandis, said before the flight he'd claim
success if Hawking had just a single half-minute float in weightlessness aboard
the company's specially modified Boeing 727 jet. It turned out that Hawking took
eight turns with ease.
"He would have flown more if we let him," said Noah
McMahon, one of Hawking's coaches as well as Zero Gravity's chief marketing
officer. "He was all smiles all the time."
Zero Gravity had originally planned to bring Hawking
back to NASA's Shuttle Landing Facility here after six ups-and-downs.
"We negotiated and agreed to do two more," Diamandis
told reporters jokingly. After the landing, Hawking's fellow fliers gave him a
round of applause.
Hawking's performance boded well for more ambitious
tests, and that's not just according to the professor. Diamandis said Hawking
weathered the flight better than his physicians had expected. He noted that the
four minutes Hawking spent in weightlessness was about as much time as he would
spend in zero-G during a suborbital space flight.
(Agencies)