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Daisuke Enomoto

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Daisuke Enomoto
NationalityJapanese
OccupationBusinessman
Space career
Spaceflight Participant Candidate
Selection2005
MissionsNone

Daisuke Enomoto (榎本大輔 Enomoto Daisuke, born April 22, 1971, nicknamed Dice-K) is a Japanese businessman and former livedoor executive who hoped to become the fourth space tourist. He had trained at Star City, Moscow in Russia to fly with two members of Expedition 14 on board Soyuz TMA-9, which was launched on September 18, 2006.

However, on 21 August, 2006, a Russian Federal Space Agency spokesman announced that Enomoto was "deemed not ready to fly for exclusively medical reasons", although he hinted that Enomoto might recover and join a later mission. His replacement on this particular flight was Iranian-American businesswoman Anousheh Ansari. Enomoto is currently involved in a lawsuit against Virginia-based Space Adventures in which he hopes to reclaim the $21 million dollars he paid the company over a 2 year span.[1]

Enomoto would have been the first self-funded space tourist from Japan and Asia (journalist Toyohiro Akiyama flew on Soyuz TM-11 in 1990, and could be regarded as the first space business traveller). Enomoto's flight would have taken him to the International Space Station (ISS) after lifting off from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, the world's oldest spaceport.

Enomoto made international news when it was revealed that he intended to go into space wearing a costume akin to that of Char Aznable, a character from the anime series Mobile Suit Gundam.[2][3] His planned experiment was to put together one or more Gundam models in zero gravity.[2]<ref>

References

  1. ^ Irene Klotz. Yahoo News. Grounded space tourist wants $21 million refund September 26, 2008. Archived at WebCite®
  2. ^ a b Kravets, David (2008-09-24). "Wannabe Space Tourist Wants $21 Million Back Over Scuttled Mission". Wired News. Retrieved 2008-10-28.
  3. ^ "Space Get Up", Wired, October, 2006 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)

External links