The Guardian Australia

Richard Branson’s Virgin Orbit reaches space eight months after first flight

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Richard Branson’s Virgin Orbit reached space on Sunday, eight months after the first demonstrat­ion flight of its air-launched rocket system failed, the company said.

A 70ft LauncherOn­e rocket was released from beneath the wing of a Boeing 747 carrier aircraft off the coast of southern California, ignited moments later and soared toward space.

The two-stage rocket carried a cluster of very small satellites known as CubeSats developed and built as part of a Nasa educationa­l program involving US universiti­es.

Virgin Orbit is separate from Virgin Galactic, the company founded by Branson to carry passengers on suborbital hops in which they will experience the sensations and sights of spacefligh­t.

Virgin Galactic expects to begin commercial operations this year in southern New Mexico.

On Sunday the Boeing 747 took off from Mojave Air and Space port in the desert north of Los Angeles and flew out over the Pacific to a drop point beyond the Channel Islands.

“According to telemetry, LauncherOn­e has reached orbit!” Virgin Orbit tweeted later. “Everyone on the team who is not in mission control right now is going absolutely bonkers.”

The rocket’s upper stage was scheduled to coast for a period and then relight to circulariz­e the orbit before deploying the satellites.

The flight developmen­ts were announced on social media. The launch was not publicly livestream­ed.

Virgin Orbit, based in Long Beach, California, is part of a wave of companies targeting the launch market for increasing­ly capable small satellites.

Competitor Rocket Lab, also headquarte­red in Long Beach, has deployed 96 payloads in 17 launches of its Electron rocket from a site in New Zealand. Another of its rockets was nearing launch on Sunday.

Virgin Orbit touts the flexibilit­y of its capability to begin its missions by using airports around the globe. It attempted its first demonstrat­ion launch in May 2020. The rocket was released and ignited but only briefly flew under power before it stopped thrusting. The lost payload was only a test satellite.

The company later said there was a breach in a high-pressure line carrying cryogenic liquid oxygen to the first-stage combustion chamber.

 ?? Photograph: Matt Hartman/AP ?? Virgin Orbit Boeing 747-400 rocket launch platform, named Cosmic Girl, takes off from Mojave Air and Space port, north of Los Angeles.
Photograph: Matt Hartman/AP Virgin Orbit Boeing 747-400 rocket launch platform, named Cosmic Girl, takes off from Mojave Air and Space port, north of Los Angeles.

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