Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Space
  3. Emerging Tech
  4. News

Space tourism: Watch Virgin Galactic’s space plane arrive at new base

Add as a preferred source on Google
 

For the very wealthy, tourist trips to space should soon become a new way to blow a large chunk of change.

Recommended Videos

While outfits such as SpaceX and Blue Origin tend to get the most column inches regarding proposed space tourism services, Virgin Galactic has also been busy working on its own system to give paying customers the ride of a lifetime.

With a view to launching its first space tourism flight as early as June 2020, Virgin Galactic has just relocated its SpaceShipTwo passenger craft, VSS Unity, to its commercial headquarters at Spaceport America in New Mexico.

VMS Eve, the aircraft that will carry Unity on the first part of its journey toward space during the tourism trips, flew the passenger craft from Mojave, California, home to the company’s manufacturing facilities.

Virgin Galactic said the three-hour flight gave it the chance to evaluate VSS Unity at high altitude and cold temperatures, as well as a chance to carry out more pilot training.

The team has been working on its space tourism project since 2004, though the endeavor suffered a serious blow in 2014 when the VSS Enterprise space plane crashed during a test flight, killing one of the two pilots. After a period of review and reflection, Virgin Galactic returned in 2016 with the new VSS Unity aircraft before making the first of several successful test flights to the edge of space in 2018.

A seat on the space plane for the 90-minute trip will set you back an eye-watering $250,000. The experience will include being carried high in the sky by the carrier plane before Unity’s rocket engines fire up to take you toward the generally agreed boundary of where space begins, around 62 miles up. Besides the breathtaking views, you’ll also experience a brief period of weightlessness before returning to Earth for a runway landing.

In time, Virgin Galactic says it wants to operate a range of vehicles from multiple locations to cater to the demands of the growing space-user community, including “transporting passengers to Earth-orbiting hotels and science laboratories or providing a world-shrinking, transcontinental service.”

Final stages of preparation

The relocation of VSS Unity to Spaceport America means the 100-strong team can now begin work on the final stages of its flight test program, starting with a number of captive carry and glide flights from the new operating base.

After that, the team will move on to rocket-powered test flights from Spaceport America to confirm VSS Unity’s readiness for its first commercial spaceflight operations.

As we mentioned at the top, Virgin Galactic isn’t the only company looking to launch space tourism flights in the near future. Blue Origin, owned by Amazon boss Jeff Bezos, is developing a reusable rocket system for the same purpose, with one of its test flights last year giving future passengers an idea of what to expect from its 10-minute space ride. Meanwhile, Elon Musk’s SpaceX also has a plan to send a Japanese billionaire and eight artists on a trip to the moon and back, possibly in 2023.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Scientists have found a hidden galaxy inside the Milky Way, and they’re calling it Loki
A lost dwarf galaxy may be hiding inside the Milky Way.
milky-way-hidden-galaxy-loki

Our home galaxy has a secret buried inside. A new study published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society suggests that the Milky Way swallowed an ancient dwarf galaxy billions of years ago, and its stellar remains are still embedded within ours.

Researchers have named this lost galaxy Loki, after the Norse trickster god, and the name is quite fitting because it remained hidden in plain sight for a very long time.

Read more
NASA aims September launch for Roman space telescope and it’s going to be a huge shift
An earlier target for Roman means one of NASA’s most ambitious observatories is getting close, with the potential to open a huge new era in space discovery
Machine, Wheel, Astronomy

NASA is now aiming to launch the Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope as soon as early September 2026, a faster timeline than its earlier commitment to fly no later than May 2027. That alone makes this one of the agency’s most important missions to watch over the next few months.

The reason is simple, Roman is built to scan vast parts of the sky with sharp infrared vision.

Read more
Blue Origin successfully re-uses a New Glenn rocket for the first time ever
Blue Origin achieves first New Glenn reflight despite payload setback
Blue Origin

Blue Origin has achieved a major milestone in its spaceflight ambitions by successfully reusing a booster from its heavy-lift New Glenn rocket for the first time. The historic launch, conducted on April 19, marks a significant step forward for Jeff Bezos’ space company as it seeks to compete with rivals like SpaceX in the rapidly evolving commercial launch market.

A Milestone With A Mixed Outcome

Read more