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posted by martyb on Monday December 05 2016, @11:39AM   Printer-friendly
from the down-to-earth-spaceship-testing dept.

On 3 December, Virgin Galactic made its first tentative return to space flight.

Virgin Galactic's new spaceship has made a successful first glide flight, a key step after a deadly crash of its predecessor two years ago, the spaceflight company said on Saturday.

The new SpaceShipTwo, dubbed VSS Unity, was hoisted aloft by carrier airplane WhiteKnightTwo VMS Eve from the Mojave Air & Space Port in California, the company said on Twitter.

Released from the mothership, VSS Unity flew home to Earth on its own, according to the company owned by British billionaire entrepreneur Richard Branson.

"VSS Unity has landed. Vehicle and crew are back safe and sound after a successful first glide test flight," Virgin Galactic tweeted at #SpaceShipTwo.

Unity's weight was kept light for the first flight, Virgin Galactic said. Its success now opens a phase of tougher flight testing before the spacecraft's hybrid rocket motor will be fired in flight.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 05 2016, @07:45PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 05 2016, @07:45PM (#437345)

    So I think SpaceShipTwo has some potential to enable lower cost research which would support space-based industry.

    I don't think so. The Space Station can't even keep their experiment bays filled with any kind of decent microgravity experiment, and they give those rides away. The problem, as was pointed out by the president of the APS when Congress was deliberating whether to build another space station and the proponents were trying to use science as the driving factor, "micro-gravity is of micro-importance."

  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday December 06 2016, @08:34AM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday December 06 2016, @08:34AM (#437575) Journal

    The Space Station can't even keep their experiment bays filled with any kind of decent microgravity experiment, and they give those rides away.

    You're not looking at total cost of the experiment. The ride may be free, but the stay is not. Just having an astronaut touch your experiment can be quite expensive.