Virgin Galactic Unveils Suborbital Spaceliner Design
By Tariq Malik
Staff Writer
Posted: January 23, 2008
NEW YORK - Future thrill-seekers will ride a sleek spacecraft
berthed under a massive, twin-boom mothership to the fringe of
space in a design unveiled Wednesday by Virgin Galactic.
The SpaceShipTwo spacecraft and its WhiteKnightTwo carrier
will begin initial tests this summer to shakedown the novel
spaceflight system designed by aerospace pioneer Burt Rutan
and his firm Scaled Composites.
"2008 really will be the year of the spaceship,"
said British entrepreneur Sir Richard Branson, founder of the
Virgin Group, who unveiled a 1/16th-scale model of the new spacecraft
here at the American Museum of Natural History. "We're
truly excited about our new system and what our new system will
be able to do."
Based on Rutan's SpaceShipOne, a piloted and reusable spacecraft
that won the $10 million Ansari X Prize for suborbital spaceflight
in 2004, SpaceShipTwo is an air-launched vehicle designed to
carry six passengers and two pilots to suborbital space and
back.
But unlike SpaceShipOne, which launched from beneath its single-cabin
WhiteKnight carrier, the new craft will drop from a twin-cabin
high-altitude jet that can double as a space tourist training
craft. WhiteKnightTwo carries four engines and a wingspan of
about 140 feet (42 meters), rivaling a B-29 bomber, and is built
to handle unmanned rockets capable of launching small satellites
into orbit, Virgin Galactic officials said.
Virgin Galactic is offering tickets aboard SpaceShipTwo spaceliners
for an initial price of about $200,000, though Branson said
the cost is expected to drop after the first five years of operations.
The space tourism firm plans to eventual launch flights out
of a terminal at New Mexico's Spaceport America, with additional
trips through the aurora borealis to be staged from Kiruna,
Sweden.
"It's fantastic," said British advertising executive
Trevor Beattie, one of the some 100 Virgin Galactic ticket holders
onhand for the unveiling. "I want to go now...with each
milestone, it's getting closer and closer."
To date, Virgin Galactic has about 200 assured passengers for
future flights, $30 million in deposits and about 85,000 registrations
from customers interested in flying aboard SpaceShipTwo.
Rutan, whose Mojave, Calif.-based Scaled has completed 60 percent
of the first SpaceShipTwo, said his firm is building at least
five of the suborbital vehicles - and two WhiteKnightTwo carriers
- for Virgin Galactic.
"This is not a small program by any stretch of the imagination,"
said Rutan, adding that his firm hopes to build at least 40
SpaceShipTwos and 15 carrier craft over the next 12 years.
Each spacecraft is designed to fly twice a day, with their
WhiteKnightTwo carriers capable of up to four daily launches,
Rutan said. Over 12 years, more than 100,000 people could fly
to suborbital space aboard the vehicles, he added.
A roomy flight
Virgin Galactic passengers like Beattie and others have already
undergone centrifuge tests to sample the experience launch and
reentry, which can exert forces of up to six times the Earth's
gravity on the human body.
Will Whitehorn, Virgin Galactic CEO, said each SpaceShipTwo
passenger will be equipped with a pressure suit as a safety
precaution, be free to move about a roomy cabin equivalent to
a Gulfstream aircraft and peer at the Earth through wide, 18-inch
(46-cm) windows during the several minutes of weightlessness
offered on each spaceflight.
"Because clearly, if you're going to go into space, you're
going to want to see the view," Whitehorn said.
SpaceShipTwo's cabin is much larger than the three-person capsule
used on SpaceShipOne, and each of the two WhiteKnightTwo carrier
craft cabins are identical that of the spacecraft to make it
a useful training tool, he said.
Family members of passengers or other space tourists can watch
a SpaceShipTwo launch from inside a WhiteKnightTwo cabin, each
of which sits just 25 feet (7.6) meters from the center-mounted
spaceship.
While the initial round of tests is slated for sometime this
summer and the first spaceflights pegged for 2009, Whitehorn
stressed that safety is paramount.
"We're in a race with nobody, apart from a race with safety,"
Whitehorn said.
Rutan said he is targeting a safety factor akin to that of
the earlier airliners of the 1920s, which should still be 100
times better than the safety of today's manned spacecraft used
by large governments today.
"Don't believe anyone who tells you that the safety level
of new spacecraft is as safe as a modern airliner," Rutan
said.
The development and testing plan for SpaceShipTwo and its carrier
craft has been slowed by an accidental fatal blast that killed
three Scaled workers last July at the Mojave Air and Space Port.
Last week, California state occupation and safety inspectors
cited Scaled for failing to provide adequate training for workers
and fined the firm more than $25,000.
Rutan said his firm has been working with state inspectors
and officials to enhance worker safety, but the actual cause
of the blast during a rocket oxidizer flow test was still unknown.
SpaceShipTwo's rocket engine will not be finalized until the
source of the explosion is pinned down, he said.
Patricia Grace Smith, the FAA's associate administrator for
commercial space transportation, lauded the commitment of Virgin
Galactic and Scaled to safety after SpaceShipTwo's unveiling.
"It is the entrepreneurial spirit that will take this
country forward," Smith said. "This is going to catch
like a wild fire we have never seen."
Article at: space.com
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