Virgin Galactic’s new flight test to soar closer to edge of space

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WASHINGTON, Dec 13, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Virgin Galactic is preparing for a new
flight test Thursday that aims to fly higher and faster than before toward
the edge of space.

The US company run by British tycoon Richard Branson is aiming to be the
first to take tourists on brief trips into microgravity.

Virgin Galactic’s fourth flight test on the VSS Unity is scheduled for
Thursday, weather permitting.

The flight will take off from a spaceport in Mojave, California.

The vessel does not launch from Earth but is carried to a higher altitude –
– about nine miles (15 kilometers) high — attached to an airplane.

Then, two pilots on the VSS Unity fire the engines toward the frontier of
space, typically defined as an altitude of 62 miles (100 kilometers).

In July, after burning the rocket motor for 42 seconds, the VSS Unity
reached a height of 32 miles, a part of the atmosphere called the mesosphere.

Commercial airplanes typically fly at an altitude of about six miles.

The VSS Unity reached a top speed of over 1,530 miles per hour, or beyond
Mach 2.

“Overall the goal of this flight is to fly higher and faster than previous
flights,” said a statement from Virgin Galactic.

“If all goes to plan our pilots will experience an extended period of
micro-gravity as VSS Unity coasts to apogee, although — being pilots — they
will remain securely strapped in throughout.”

Another US rocket company, Blue Origin, founded by Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos,
is also racing to be the first to send tourists to space, but using a small
rocket to get there.

Virgin’s first flight date has been pushed back multiple times, following a
test flight accident that killed a co-pilot in 2014.

Branson told CNN in November he hoped to send people to space “before
Christmas.”

More than 600 clients have already paid $250,000 for a ticket.