Launch Window for 2nd Virgin Galactic Spaceflight Announced | Aero-News Network
Aero-News Network
RSS icon RSS feed
podcast icon MP3 podcast
Subscribe Aero-News e-mail Newsletter Subscribe

Airborne Unlimited -- Most Recent Daily Episodes

Episode Date

Airborne-Monday

Airborne-Tuesday

Airborne-Wednesday Airborne-Thursday

Airborne-Friday

Airborne On YouTube

Airborne-Unlimited-06.10.24

Airborne-NextGen-06.11.24

Airborne-Unlimited-06.12.24 Airborne-FltTraining-06.13.24

Airborne-Unlimited-06.14.24

Sat, Jul 15, 2023

Launch Window for 2nd Virgin Galactic Spaceflight Announced

Play it Again, Sir Richard

Virgin Galactic Holdings, Inc. announced that the flight-window for its Galactic 02 mission will open on 10 August. Subject mission, if launched, will be the company’s seventh spaceflight, second commercial spaceflight, and third spaceflight in 2023.

Galactic 02 is slated to convey three private passengers to space, thereby continuing the Virgin Galactic’s hopeful cadence of spaceflights.

Details of the flight manifest, including the identities of the crew and pilots, will be made public at a later date.

Virgin Galactic cordially invites interested parties to participate virtually in the launch and witness first (ish)-hand the spectacle of spaceflight. The livestream will be broadcast on VirginGalactic.com.

On 29 June 2023, after 19 years of delays, setbacks (to include a fatal accident) regulatory woes, federal investigations, and lawsuits, Virgin Galactic, the California-based spaceflight subsidiary of Sir Richard Branson’s Virgin Group, actualized its founder’s ambition to transport paying passengers to the edge of space.

Dubbed Galactic 01, the historic flight saw Virgin Mother-Ship (VMS) Eve, a four-engine, twin-fuselage, twin-empennage behemoth named for Evette Branson, Sir Richard’s mother, lumber skyward from Virgin Galactic’s New Mexico Spaceport America facility at 08:30 MDT.

Slung beneath Eve’s center-wing section, Virgin Space Ship (VSS) Unity and its complement of three Italian astronauts and two company pilots stalwartly bore the weight of Virgin Galactic’s hopes and the scrutiny of an onlooking world.

Virgin Galactic tweeted: "VSS Unity is currently climbing to release altitude. Our #Galactic01 crew from the @ItalianAirForce & @CNRsocial_, are preparing to conduct 13 scientific research experiments throughout the stages of flight.”

Reaching FL400, Unity separated uneventfully from Eve, dropped free of the massive mother-ship, and fired its hybrid rocket engine.

Accelerating to Mach 2.88, Unity climbed toward space’s edge, reaching its 52.9-mile (279,312-foot) apogee some 58 minutes after Eve lifted off from the Land of Enchantment. For thirteen-minutes, the vehicle drifted at the edge of space while its Italian crew conducted a pre-planned series of scientific experiments.

Unity’s return to Earth was nominal—a term denoting perfection in the argot of spaceflight—culminating in a nicely-executed, 09:42 MDT landing at Spaceport America.

"What a beautiful landing and a perfect way to complete our first commercial flight and our first dedicated science mission. Congratulations to everyone on board," Virgin Galactic's Sirisha Bandla enthused upon Unity’s touchdown.

Branson founded Virgin Galactic in 2004, declaring at the time that the company’s first paying passengers would ascend spaceward by 2007. In 2019 the company went public, and has since lost hundreds of millions of dollars while generating only nominal revenue. In the cryptic parlance of finance, the term nominal denotes very, very small.

The mission’s success notwithstanding, Virgin Galactic’s characteristically-volatile stock tumbled 11-percent following the safe landing of the Galactic 01 mission.  

Caleb Henry, director of research at the space advisory firm Quilty Analytics, remarked: “Branson founded Virgin Galactic almost twenty-years ago. He’s been very patient with trying to see this company through to success. I would say the time is coming where they really do need to deliver on that.”

In addition to investor and consumer uncertainty occasioned by the company’s protracted and difficult gestation, the likelihood of Virgin Galactic’s success is diminished by the company’s narrow focus. Unlike its competitors, which maintain diversified revenue streams the likes of satellite-launch services and ISS cargo supply missions for NASA, Virgin Galactic’s business-model is predicated solely upon suborbital human space-travel.

Virgin Galactic CEO Michael Colglazier remains confident his company’s focus will broaden, but conceded profitability is contingent upon the introduction of Virgin Galactic’s new Delta-class spaceplanes. Optimized, ostensibly, for faster turnaround and easier refurbishment, the Delta vessels are slated to debut in 2025.

Mr. Colglazier posits Virgin Galactic’s customer base will remain small in the short-term, with genuine profitability unlikely until 2026 or 2027.

“I think this is going to be a capacity-constrained business for a couple of decades, at least,” Colglazier opined. “We need to normalize this industry, it’s not usual for your neighbor to go to space.”

FMI: www.virgingalactic.com

Advertisement

More News

ANNouncement: Now Accepting Applications For Oshkosh 2024 Stringers!!!

An Amazing Experience Awaits The Chosen Few... Oshkosh, to us, seems the perfect place to get started on watching aviation recover the past couple of years... and so ANN is putting>[...]

Aero-News: Quote of the Day (06.13.24)

“NBAA has a tremendous responsibility to the business aviation industry, and we are constantly collaborating with them. Our flight departments, professionals and aircraft own>[...]

ANN's Daily Aero-Term (06.13.24): Dead Reckoning

Dead Reckoning Dead reckoning, as applied to flying, is the navigation of an airplane solely by means of computations based on airspeed, course, heading, wind direction, and speed,>[...]

ANN's Daily Aero-Linx (06.13.24)

Aero Linx: Vertical Aviation Safety Team (VAST) We are a public–private initiative to enhance worldwide flight operations safety in all segments of the vertical flight indust>[...]

ANN FAQ: How Do I Become A News Spy?

We're Everywhere... Thanks To You! Even with the vast resources and incredibly far-reaching scope of the Aero-News Network, every now and then a story that should be reported on sl>[...]

blog comments powered by Disqus



Advertisement

Advertisement

Podcasts

Advertisement

© 2007 - 2024 Web Development & Design by Pauli Systems, LC