Branson's Virgin Orbit reaches space with key mid-air rocket launch
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[January 19, 2021]
By Joey Roulette
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Billionaire Richard
Branson’s Virgin Orbit reached space for the first time on Sunday with a
successful test of its air-launched rocket, delivering ten NASA
satellites to orbit and achieving a key milestone after aborting the
rocket’s first test launch last year.
The Long Beach, California-based company’s LauncherOne rocket was
dropped mid-air from the underside of a modified Boeing 747 nicknamed
Cosmic Girl some 35,000 feet over the Pacific at 11:39 a.m. PT before
lighting its NewtonThree engine to boost itself out of Earth’s
atmosphere, demonstrating its first successful trek to space.
"According to telemetry, LauncherOne has reached orbit!" the company
announced on Twitter during the test mission, dubbed Launch Demo 2. "In
both a literal and figurative sense, this is miles beyond how far we
reached in our first Launch Demo."
Roughly two hours after its Cosmic Girl carrier craft took off from the
Mojave Air and Space Port in southern California, the rocket, a 70-foot
launcher tailored for carrying small satellites to space, successfully
placed 10 tiny satellites in orbit for NASA, the company said on
Twitter.
The rocket, a 70-foot launcher tailored for carrying small satellites to
space, aimed to place 10 tiny satellites in orbit for NASA roughly two
hours into the mission, though Virgin Orbit had not confirmed whether
they were deployed as planned.
The successful test and clean payload deployment was a needed double-win
for Virgin Orbit, which last year failed its attempt to reach space when
LauncherOne’s main engine shut down prematurely moments after releasing
from its carrier aircraft. The shortened mission generated key test data
for the company, it said.
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A view of Richard Branson's Virgin Orbit, with a rocket underneath
the wing of a modified Boeing 747 jetliner, during test launch of
its high-altitude launch system for satellites from Mojave,
California, U.S. January 17, 2021. REUTERS/Gene Blevins
Sunday’s test also thrusts Virgin Orbit into an increasingly
competitive commercial space race, offering a unique “air-launch”
method of sending satellites to orbit alongside rivals such as
Rocket Lab and Firefly Aerospace, which have designed small-launch
systems to inject smaller satellites into orbit and meet growing
demand.
Virgin executives say high-altitude launches allow satellites to be
placed in their intended orbit more efficiently and also minimize
weather-related cancellations compared to more traditional rockets
launched vertically from a ground pad.
Virgin Orbit’s government services subsidiary VOX Space LLC is
selling launches using the system to the U.S. military, with a first
mission slated for October under a $35 million U.S. Space Force
contract for three missions.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette in Washington; Editing by Eric M.
Johnson and Daniel Wallis)
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