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Richard Branson's Virgin Orbit Pushes Midair Rocket Launch to Monday

Accepted submission by upstart at 2020-05-24 17:40:17
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Richard Branson's Virgin Orbit pushes midair rocket launch to Monday [cnet.com]:

Though Virgin Orbit has been devoting some of its resources to help build ventilators for California's Emergency Medical Services Authority during the Covid-19 pandemic [cnet.com], the company also has big plans for this week, with the first demonstration of its LauncherOne rocket [cnet.com].

LauncherOne is Virgin's take on an orbital launch system. Rather than blasting off from the ground like SpaceX [cnet.com], Rocket Lab or other competitors, founder Richard Branson's concept involves attaching a small rocket to the belly of a modified 747, flying it above 75 percent of Earth's atmosphere and launching it from there.

Last July, Virgin Orbit completed a test run [cnet.com] in which a rocket was successfully dropped from Cosmic Girl, a 747 plucked from the Virgin Atlantic fleet, but Launcher One's NewtonThree first stage engine wasn't ignited.

The company planned to do a full demonstration launch Sunday, May 24, but a screwy sensor prompted the team to scrub for the day "out of an abundance of caution."

The company tweeted that the issue should be resolved quickly, which would allow for the launch to still go forward during its backup window on Monday between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. PT. The plan is for Cosmic Girl to take off from Mojave Air and Space Port in California and release the LauncherOne rocket over the Pacific Ocean. After a few seconds of free fall, the rocket's engine will ignite in midair for the first time and head toward low earth orbit.

There won't be a livestream of the demonstration, but CNET will keep you posted on how it goes and post footage as soon as it's over.

The launch comes at a busy time for Virgin Orbit, which has been working on producing ventilators [viglink.com] for use in California during the coronavirus pandemic.

If Monday's demonstration launch goes well, the company will begin prepping for its first paid launch, a collaboration between NASA and universities to launch small satellites. That launch could happen as soon as June 29.

1st test launch by Richard Branson's Virgin Orbit postponed [phys.org]:

May 24, 2020

1st test launch by Richard Branson's Virgin Orbit postponed

Richard Branson's Virgin Orbit postponed its first space launch Sunday due to a technical problem.

The company said one sensor was "acting up" and fuel was being offloaded from the rocket in Mojave, California, to address what it termed a minor issue.

"This means we are scrubbed for today," it said in its social media post.

A backup launch window was available Monday morning but the company did not immediately announce its revised plan for the inaugural use of its air launch system.

Virgin Orbit's rocket is carried beneath the wing of a Boeing 747 that will take off from Mojave Air and Space Port in the desert north of Los Angeles and fly out over the Pacific Ocean.

The rocket will be released and its motor will ignite a few seconds later to propel a dummy satellite into low Earth orbit.

Virgin Orbit, based in Long Beach, California, is a sister company to Virgin Galactic, the space tourism company preparing to carry passengers on suborbital flights over New Mexico.

Explore further

Virgin Orbit in launch deal with UK's Royal Air Force [phys.org]

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