VSSUnity

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  • ASSOCIATED PRESS

    Virgin Galactic sends its first passenger to the edge of space

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    02.22.2019

    Virgin Galactic sent its first test passenger into sub-space today. The company's chief astronaut instructor Beth Moses accompanied two pilots on a flight 55.85 miles above the Earth, just a few miles below the internationally recognized space boundary, 62 miles. This will likely come as good news to the more than 600 people from 58 countries who have paid or put down deposits for suborbital flights with Virgin Galactic -- some of those passengers have been queuing for as many as 14 years.

  • Courtesy of the Smithsonian’s National Air and Space Museum. Photo by Eric Long

    Virgin Galactic donates SpaceShipTwo rocket motor to the Smithsonian

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    02.10.2019

    You might see a piece of private spaceflight history on display when you visit Washington, DC in the future. Virgin Galactic has donated SpaceShipTwo's (VSS Unity) historic rocket motor to the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. This is the powerplant that took the craft into space for the first time this past December, and represents both "technical achievement" as well as proof of what you can do through "entrepreneurial innovation," according to museum director Ellen Stofan.

  • Virgin Galactic

    Virgin Galactic breaks Mach 2 in third powered test flight

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    07.26.2018

    Virgin Galactic conducted another test of its VSS Unity, taking it out on a third rocket-powered supersonic flight this morning. After being released from the VMS Eve carrier craft, the VSS Unity flew higher than it has previously, reaching a peak altitude of 170,800 feet and entering the mesosphere for the first time. It also reached speeds of Mach 2.47 during its 42 second rocket burn. The first and second VSS Unity powered test flights reached altitudes of 84,271 feet and 114,500 feet and speeds of Mach 1.87 and 1.9, respectively.

  • Sitael

    Virgin Galactic plans to open a commercial spaceport in Italy

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    07.06.2018

    Virgin Galactic announced today that it has partnered with two Italian aerospace companies with the aim to bring commercial space flight to Italy in the future, The Verge reports. Alongside Altec, which is owned in part by the Italian Space Agency, and private space company Sitael, Virgin Galactic intends to develop an Italian spaceport from which future flights can take off. "From the Renaissance to modern space science, Italy has always been a natural home to great innovators and breakthrough ideas which have shaped the human experience," Virgin Group founder Richard Branson said in a statement. "I believe Italy's vision, which has led to this collaboration with our Virgin space companies, will provide a real impetus as we strive to open space for the benefit of life on Earth."

  • Virgin Galactic

    Watch Virgin Galactic Unity's second rocket-powered flight

    by 
    Mariella Moon
    Mariella Moon
    05.31.2018

    Virgin Galactic's VSS Unity recently flew its second rocket-powered flight merely a couple of months after its first. That's definitely a victory for the company, considering it designed Unity to be flown at a higher frequency than other spacecraft. To show the world its successful supersonic flight, the private space corporation has uploaded a video of the event, from the moment it took off to its landing on the runway tarmac at the Mojave Air and Space Port where Virgin Galactic chief Richard Branson was waiting.

  • Virgin Galactic

    Watch Virgin Galactic's new SpaceshipTwo take flight

    by 
    Richard Lawler
    Richard Lawler
    04.05.2018

    As Virgin Galactic continues its quest to "open" space flight, it completed its first powered test flight since the 2014 crash that killed one of its pilots. Now we have video of the new SpaceShipTwo, VSS Unity, separating from its carry vehicle and using its rocket to reach supersonic speeds. It hit Mach 1.87 during its 30-second rocket burn and then coasted until reaching an altitude of 84,271 ft before preparing for its return.

  • Gene Blevins / Reuters

    Virgin Galactic completes first powered test flight since 2014 crash

    by 
    Swapna Krishna
    Swapna Krishna
    04.05.2018

    Today, SpaceShipTwo completed its first powered test since the horrific crash in 2014 that killed one of its pilots. The craft, VSS Unity, took off from Mojave Air and Space Port aboard a plane called CMS Eve, and was piloted by two people. According to Richard Branson, the vehicle went supersonic, up to Mach 1.6. He proclaimed Virgin Galactic "back on track." Update: And now there's video! Check it out here.

  • Virgin Galactic

    Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipTwo is almost ready for powered tests

    by 
    Swapna Krishna
    Swapna Krishna
    01.11.2018

    Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo might be best known for its horrific crash in 2014, which killed one of its pilots, but the company has slowly been coming back from that setback. Now, the company announced that the reusable craft, called the VSS Unity, has successfully completed its eleventh glide test. The company used used water as a ballast to replicate the conditions of a rocket-powered flight.

  • Virgin Galactic

    Virgin Galactic conducts a 'dry run' for rocket-powered flights

    by 
    Mariella Moon
    Mariella Moon
    08.05.2017

    Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo (official name VSS Unity) has just completed its sixth test glide. The reusable spaceplane still has between two to nine more staged glides to go before the aerospace company moves on to rocket-propelled tests. But this one is special because it serves as a dry run for actual rocket-powered flights. It flew with the configuration a powered flight will have, carrying propulsion components onboard, along with 1,000 pounds of water to simulate the weight of fuel casing.

  • Virgin Galactic

    Virgin Galactic to conduct first powered spaceship tests in 3 years

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    07.05.2017

    Virgin Galactic is determined to put its private space travel plans back on track following its tragic 2014 crash. Richard Branson tells Bloomberg that the company is about to resume powered test flights for the first time in close to 3 years, ending a series of glide-only tests that began in December. The company will fly in the atmosphere every 3 weeks, and plans to return to space (or at least, the edge of space) by November or December.

  • Virgin Galactic

    Virgin Galactic tests Unity's re-entry system for the first time

    by 
    Mariella Moon
    Mariella Moon
    05.02.2017

    Virgin Galactic has successfully tested its newest spacecraft's "feather" re-entry system for the first time. That's what it calls the mechanism wherein the vehicle folds up its twin tail booms so that it can behave more like a capsule and increase stability upon re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere. Virgin has conducted VSS Unity's flight test from the Mojave Air and Space Port after testing its feathering mechanism on the ground extensively. It's imperative for the company to make sure that its re-entry system works perfectly, seeing as it was created to replace a vehicle that broke apart after one of its pilots triggered the same mechanism below the ideal speed.

  • Virgin Galactic's new spaceship completes its first glide test

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    12.04.2016

    Virgin Galactic just came much closer to resuming its dreams of private spaceflight in the wake of its tragic crash from 2014. The company has successfully conducted the first glide test flight for VSS Unity, better known as the new SpaceShipTwo. The vehicle was only flying free for 10 minutes and never traveled faster than Mach 0.6, but that was enough to get a healthy amount of data illustrating how Unity behaves in real life.

  • Virgin Galactic

    Virgin Galactic returns to the skies after two years

    by 
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    09.09.2016

    Virgin Galactic has announced that it has successfully test-flown its new (edge of) space plane. It's the first time in two years that Galactic craft has taken to the skies as the program was put on hold after the fatal crash in 2014. This flight, which lasted nearly four hours over the Mojave desert, involved the SpaceShipTwo-class launch vehicle, VMS Eve, carry the passenger cruiser, VSS Unity, at heights of over 50,000 feet.