Virgin Galactic's second SpaceShipTwo successfully
completed a test flight today, two years after a man was killed when the first
aircraft crashed. The SpaceShipTwo, dubbed VSS Unity, landed in
Mojave, California, about 10 minutes after it cleanly detached from its carrier
aircraft WhiteKnightTwo, which also returned to ground safely.
Virgin Group
founder Sir Richard joined Virgin Galactic chief executive George Whitesides
and other onlookers to witness the test flight, smiling and clapping as VSS
Unity's two pilots manned the vehicle back on to the runway. Astronaut Tim
Peake also sent his well-wishes to the Virgin team as the test glide got under
way.
He tweeted, "Good luck with this new phase of
the test programme @virgingalactic - safe flight £pushingboundaries."After
further glide flights, the next step in the group's ongoing mission to make
space tourism a reality will be to conduct rocket-powered flights to test the
Unity's hybrid motor.
Last year, an investigation by the National
Transportation Safety Body found a fatal October 2014 crash was caused by a
catastrophic structural failure triggered when the co-pilot unlocked the
craft's braking system early. The
spaceship broke apart over the Mojave Desert during a powered test flight,
killing co-pilot Michael Alsbury and seriously injuring pilot Peter Siebold.
Virgin Galactic has said it will officially launch
operations from Spaceport America in New Mexico with paying passengers
"once it believes it is safe to do so" and it has received all
regulatory approvals.
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