SPACEPORT AMERICA, N.M. — Early this morning (July 11),
billionaire Richard Branson and five other crewmates briefly
launched into space for the first fully crewed spaceflight of Virgin Galactic's
SpaceShipTwo spaceplane.
At
8:40 a.m. local time (10:40 a.m. EDT; 1440 GMT), the crew of Virgin Galactic's Unity 22 test flight mission took off
from the company's Spaceport America facility in New
Mexico and flew just above the boundary of space, where the four passengers and
two pilots experienced about four minutes of weightlessness.
It
was "the experience of a lifetime," Branson said during a live
broadcast of the flight. Branson, designated "Astronaut 001" for the
Unity 22 mission, founded the Virgin Group of companies that includes Virgin
Galactic.
The SpaceShip Two vehicle, named VSS Unity, made a
successful, crewed suborbital test flight to 282,000 feet (86 kilometers) above
Earth's surface before gliding back down to Spaceport America for a smooth
runway landing.
A
flawless flight
This
test flight is the company's fourth crewed spaceflight but the first to carry a
full crew of two pilots and four mission specialists. In addition to Branson,
the crew that flew today included Beth Moses, Virgin Galactic's chief astronaut
instructor; Colin Bennet, the lead operations engineer at the company; and
Sirisha Bandla, Virgin Galactic's vice president of government affairs and
research operations. Pilots Dave Mackay and Mike Masucci rounded out the
team.
The
Unity 22 mission lifted off from Spaceport America with the company's VSS Unity spaceplane climbing to an altitude of 50,000
feet (15,000 meters) with the help of its "mothership" VMS Eve, a
WhiteKnightTwo carrier plane. After reaching this altitude, VMS Eve let the
space plane go and from there it rocketed up to 53 miles (86 km) above Earth's
surface before returning to Earth and landing not too far from where it took
off at Spaceport America.
Virgin Galactic invited a crowd of guests to the launch,
including customers with reservations for future flights (they're paying
$250,000 a seat for the trip). One friend of Branson's, SpaceX CEO and founder
Elon Musk, was in the audience and wished his fellow billionaire
well. Singer Khalid debuted his new single "New Normal" after
landing (Branson and his crew got to listen to it during their glide back to
Earth), and comedian Stephen Colbert of The Late Show hosted the company's live
webcast.
Branson
even announced a new partnership between Virgin Galactic and Omaze to raffle
off two free tickets to space. Finally, the first time flyers — Bandla, Branson
and Bennett — each got special Virgin Galactic astronaut wings with a tiny
SpaceShipTwo on them.
"We've
been to space, everybody! " Branson cheered during a post-flight press
conference. "So thrilling when a lifetime's dream comes true."
An
early look at VSS Unity suggests a very smooth flight, said Mike Moses, Virgin
Galactic's president of space missions and safety. About the only glitch was
some garbled video and audio from inside the passenger cabin, which may be an
antenna blockage issue, he said.
"Everything
looked perfect in real time," Moses said, adding that a quick walkaround
the vehicle revealed few flaws. "The ship looks pristine — no issues
whatsoever."
There has been some debate over whether this flight officially
reached space. VSS Unity's achieved altitude is high enough for the crew
on board to have earned astronaut wings by standards set by the U.S. military,
the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) and NASA, which set the boundary of
outer space at 50 miles (80 km). However, it is below the Kármán line, another
popularly recognized boundary of outer space, which begins at an altitude of 62
miles (100 km). This difference was pointed out by Virgin Galactic competitor Blue Origin, which is launching its New Shepard crewed
suborbital flight with its founder, Jeff Bezos, on July 20. This upcoming
mission will pass the Kármán line.
A step
closer to passenger launches
With the Unity 22 test flight, Virgin Galactic aimed for the
crew to evaluate the "private astronaut experience," according to a statement from the company. The flight
focused on "cabin and customer experience objectives," the statement
shared, which include evaluating comfort and what the cabin feels like with a
full crew, the experience of being weightless and
viewing Earth from space, demonstrating how the crew might conduct research
experiments and seeing how well the crew's training at Spaceport America
prepared them for the mission.
Following
this successful launch and landing, the crew will now inspect the vehicles and
begin an extensive data review, according to the same statement. This review
will help to inform the company's flight program and future missions like this.
Virgin Galactic is aiming to launch two more crewed test flights before
beginning full commercial service in 2022.
For Virgin Galactic,
today's launch was a major milestone. Branson founded the company in 2004 after
Spaceship One, a vehicle built by the company Scaled Composites and financed by
the late billionaire Paul Allen, won the $10 million Ansari X Prize for
reusable commercial spaceflight.
Branson
tapped Scaled Composites to design Spaceship Two and its carrier plane, but the
road to astronaut launches has been slow and painful.
A
fatal ground accident in 2007 killed three Scaled Composites employees and in
2014, Virgin Galactic's first SpaceShipTwo, the VSS Enterprise, broke apart
during a powered test flight. That tragic accident, attributed to pilot error,
killed one pilot and seriously injured another, leading Virgin Galactic to
develop new safety systems to prevent it from happening again. With
today's flight, Virgin Galactic appears to be poised to meet its 2022 target
for passenger flight.
"I have dreamt about this moment since I was a child, but going to space was more magical than I ever imagined," Branson wrote of the experience.
Welcome aboard #Unity22, Virgin Galactic's first fully-crewed test flight. Watch the historic moment through the eyes of our mission specialists. pic.twitter.com/DEwbBkgJYl
— Virgin Galactic (@virgingalactic) July 13, 2021
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