suborbital

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  • Virgin Galactic successfully completes its first commercial spaceflight

    Virgin Galactic completes its first commercial spaceflight

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    06.29.2023

    After building to this point for 10 years, Virgin Galactic has successfully completed its first commercial flight.

  • Blue Origin is set to launch its reusable New Shepard rocket on a suborbital mission today (September 24th) and test sensors for a vehicle that could one day land on the Moon.

    Watch the Blue Origin sensor test that will help NASA land on the Moon (update: scrubbed)

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    09.24.2020

    Blue Origin is set to launch its reusable New Shepard rocket on a suborbital mission today (September 24th) and test sensors for a vehicle that could one day land on the Moon.

  • Illustration of the Sun rising over the Earth, as seen from space. The moon is seen off to the left. On the dark side of the Earth, cities can be seen illuminating the night.

    NASA plans to use private spacecraft for crewed suborbital flights

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    06.23.2020

    NASA has begun an effort to fly astronauts and other people aboard private spacecraft that could be more affordable and accessible.

  • Loren Elliott via Getty Images

    SpaceX asks permission to take Starship on a high-altitude test flight

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    02.04.2020

    One of the next major steps in SpaceX's plans for true spaceflight will be a 12-mile-high test flight. Sometime between March and September, the company plans to launch its Starship suborbital test vehicle from Boca Chica, Texas. The Starship will travel to an altitude of 12.4 miles, or 20 kilometers. SpaceX will then attempt to land and recover the vehicle.

  • ASSOCIATED PRESS

    Virgin Galactic is going public to fund its expensive tourist spaceflights

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    07.09.2019

    Space tourism company Virgin Galactic has announced that it will go public via a merger with an investment firm. Its new partner, Social Capital Hedosophia (SCH), will invest $800 million in exchange for a 49 percent stake and take Virgin Galactic public later in 2019 -- a first for a spaceflight company.

  • Visualized: Telescope aboard suborbital NASA rocket takes clearest ever images of sun (video)

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    07.23.2012

    NASA has shown just what it can do with the short window of science allowed by its "sounding" or sensor-equipped suborbital rockets -- having taken the sharpest pictures ever of the sun's corona. A 460-pound telescope called the High Resolution Coronal Imager (Hi-C) was lofted for about 10 minutes into space, ample time for its mirrors to capture over 150 images of the solar fringe at 16-megapixels each, before parachuting back to earth. The scope shot exclusively in a sun-friendly high ultraviolet range and used innovative new optics consisting of an array of mirrors, allowing it to resolve the sun down to 135 miles. That bested the previous champ, NASA's own Solar Dynamics Observatory, with almost five times the magnification. For maximum effect, the space agency took advantage of an unusually high amount of solar activity to focus on a large, active sunspot. To see the results in glorious multihued HD, check the video after the break.

  • XCOR Lynx propulsion tech tests well on motorcycle, suborbital trip still pricey

    by 
    Sarah Silbert
    Sarah Silbert
    05.05.2012

    Before parting with $95,000 to secure a spot on the Lynx suborbital flight, you'd want to make sure the spacecraft was safe, right? XCOR doesn't blame you: it recently tested out its piston pump technology on a Triumph Street Triple motorcycle with great results. Sure, it's not the same as flying to the edge of space, but the Triumph has the same cylinder arrangement as the Lynx's liquid oxygen and kerosene fuel pumps and develops a similar amount of horsepower. It's also loads cheaper than testing in the laboratory. The bike took a 20-hour drive (the equivalent of 400 Lynx flights, according to XCOR) along Route 66 without the piston pump suffering any wear and tear. So if propulsion-related safety concerns -- and not the depth of your wallet -- were holding you back from nabbing a seat on the Lynx, you might feel a tad more inclined to whip out the plastic now. Head past the break for the full PR, plus a video of the piston-pumped Triumph in action.

  • GENIE rocket system does smooth VTOL, lateral flight, cheap trips to Mars (video)

    by 
    Sharif Sakr
    Sharif Sakr
    02.16.2012

    NASA can't just park up in the middle of space and rely on Robotnaut 2 for its entertainment. Actually, it probably can, but at some point the urge to explore new worlds will become too strong to resist. That's when it'll need a suborbital rocket guidance system like the GENIE ("Guidance Embedded Navigator Integration Environment"), which transforms a flood of sensory data into reliable and autonomous maneuvers. Fortunately, the system's economics make a whole lot more sense than its name, which is why NASA is depending on technology like this to control the next generation of affordable and reusable space craft. The test flight shown after the break can only boost GENIE's chances: it took a Xombie rocket up to 160 feet and then made it fly laterally for another 160 feet before landing with a degree of swagger that makes the previous flight in 2010 look plain rickety.

  • Space Adventures undercuts Virgin Galactic -- announces $100,000 space tourism flight

    by 
    Laura June Dziuban
    Laura June Dziuban
    05.13.2010

    Space tourism is something we here at Engadget have always been pretty fond of in theory -- it is the final frontier, after all -- but the prohibitive (exorbitant, extravagant, ridiculous) $200,000 price tag on a Virgin Galactic flight pretty much ended any small hopes we ever harbored of getting on one. So, would a reduction of about 50 percent be enough to get us to sign up? That's the question that Virginia-based Space Adventures is asking. The company's just announced it's going to offer flights into suborbital space through an exclusive agreement with Armadillo Aerospace, which is currently developing the rockets for the journeys. A trip with Space Adventures is set to cost just $102,000. We still can't afford it, but we're certainly glad to see the prices fall from insane to outrageous. So, what about you? Are you in?

  • Space contests take flight, IRS takes notice

    by 
    Donald Melanson
    Donald Melanson
    02.01.2007

    It looks like we're in the midst of a space race of a different sort, with no less than three recent contests promising to take would-be space cadets into varying degrees of orbit for free, although it seems that the winners may be in for more than a case of space sickness. Our cautionary tale comes courtesy of Oracle and Space Adventures, who awarded a suborbital spaceflight to one lucky winner, Brian Emmett, only to have him find out he'd have to pay taxes on the $138,000 value of the round-trip flight, forcing him to give up his seat in favor of someone with deeper pockets. While its potential tax burden is unclear, Microsoft is forging ahead with its "Vanishing Point" space contest, set to announce the winner tomorrow, who'll also get a taste of some suborbital action. Those looking to hitch a ride on the cheap aren't entirely out of luck just yet, however, with New Scientist and Audi today announcing their own contest that'll run through April 30th. To enter, you just have to tell 'em what you think is the world's best patented invention, with one lucky winner set to be shot 62 miles above the Earth, decked out in their own personalized suborbital flight suit no less. Those of us on this side of the pond are unfortunately out of luck on this one though, with the contest strictly for U.K. residents only.Read - Space.com, "No Free Ride to Space for Contest Winners"Read - The Register, "Microsoft prepares to shoot geek into space"Read - New Scientist's "Win a trip into space"[Thanks, Matt]