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Tue, Mar 01, 2011

First Contract To Send Researchers To Space Signed By Virgin Galactic

SwRI Has Made Full Deposits For Flight By Two Scientists

A recently-signed contract with the Southwest Research Institute is the first such agreement to fly scientists into space (over 100 kilometers or 328,000 feet above the Earth), enabling valuable microgravity, biology, climate and astronomy research, according to Virgin Galactic, which will fly the missions.

As part of the contract announced Monday, SwRI has made full deposits for two researchers to fly on Virgin Galactic's spacecraft, with the intent to make similar arrangements for an additional six seats for a total value of $1.6 million. As well as flying its own researchers, who will carry scientific experiments developed by its in-house technical staff, SwRI also aims to assist American researchers who do not have direct spaceflight experience to develop and fly their payloads and personnel on suborbital missions.

"This agreement signals the enormous scientific potential of the Virgin spaceflight system," said George Whitesides, Virgin Galactic President and CEO. "Virgin Galactic will be able to offer researchers flights to space that are unprecedented in frequency and cost. Science flights will be an important growth area for the company in the years to come, building on the strong commercial success already demonstrated by deposits received from over 400 individuals for Virgin's space experience."

Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo currently in flight testing, and is on a spacecraft that has already sent humans into space, the X Prize-winning SpaceShipOne.

SwRI's Dr. Alan Stern, Associate Vice President of SwRI's Space Division and former NASA Associate Administrator for Science, stated: "We at SwRI are very excited about this agreement. Initially, two of our payload specialists will be flying on Virgin Galactic, conducting biomedical monitoring, atmospheric imaging, and microgravity planetary regolith experiments. We're excited to be flying with Virgin Galactic to pioneer research missions on their amazing vehicles; we look forward to the not so distant day when entire Virgin Galactic flights are filled with researchers and their experiments." Dr. Stern is the Principal Investigator of this project.

NASA has recognized the importance of this research platform through its new Commercial Reusable Suborbital Research Flight Opportunities program. While separate from today's announcement, that program will open significant additional opportunities for researchers onboard suborbital vehicles. The Virgin Galactic-SwRI agreement represents another important endorsement of the value of regular commercial human space access for a wide range of science and educational applications.

FMI: www.virgingalactic.com

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