Founded by entrepreneur
Peter Diamandis, astronaut
Byron K. Lichtenberg, and NASA engineer Ray Cronise, the company has been operating weightless flights since 2004. Over 15000 were clients as of November 2017. and
Teller,
Martha Stewart,
Burt Rutan,
Buzz Aldrin,
Casey Neistat,
John Carmack, and
Tony Hawk.
Theoretical physicist Stephen Hawking also completed a shortened flight on April 26, 2007. In April 2006, Zero-G became the first commercial company to gain permission from the
Kennedy Space Center to use its
space shuttle runway and landing facilities. On April 21, 2007, it began regular flights from
Las Vegas for the general public at ticket prices of US$3,675. In March 2008, the company was acquired by
Space Adventures. On April 20, 2011, a Safety Approval was granted to Zero-G by the FAA which allows the company to "...offer reduced gravity parabolic flights to prospective suborbital launch operators to meet the applicable components of the crew qualification and training requirements outlined in the Code of Federal Regulations (14 C.F.R., Section 460.5)." ==Flight experience==