Oman Daily Observer

Billionair­e Branson set to fly to space aboard Virgin Galactic rocket plane

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LONDON: Decades after burnishing his reputation as a wealthy daredevil mogul in a series of boating and hot-air balloon expedition­s, Richard Branson is poised to promote his burgeoning astro-tourism venture by launching himself to the final frontier.

Branson’s Virgin Galactic Holding Inc is due on Sunday to send the company’s passenger rocket plane, the VSS Unity, on its first fully crewed test flight to the edge of space, with

the British billionair­e founder among the six individual­s strapping in for the ride.

The gleaming white spaceplane will be borne by a twin-fuselage carrier jet dubbed VMS Eve (named for Branson’s mother) to an altitude of 50,000 feet, where Unity will be released and soar by rocket power in an almost vertical climb through the outer fringe of Earth’s atmosphere.

At the apex of its flight some 89 km above the New Mexico desert, the crew will experience a few minutes of weightless­ness before making a gliding descent back to Earth. If all goes according to plan, the flight will last about 90 minutes and end where it began — on a runway at Spaceport America near the aptly named town of Truth or Consequenc­es.

Virgin’s Unity 22 mission marks the 22nd test flight of the spacecraft, and the company’s fourth crewed mission beyond Earth’s atmosphere. But it will be the first to carry a full complement of space travellers — two pilots and four “mission specialist­s,” Branson among them.

Although the mission is seen as a potential milestone in helping transform citizen rocket travel into a mainstream commercial venture, spacefligh­t remains an inherently hazardous endeavour.

An earlier prototype of the Virgin Galactic rocket plane crashed during a test flight over California’s Mojave Desert in 2014, killing one pilot and seriously injuring another.

If successful, Sunday’s flight will also give Branson bragging rights to besting rival Jeff Bezos and his space company, Blue Origin, in what has been popularise­d as a “billionair­e space race.” Bezos, founder of online

retail giant Amazon.com, is slated to fly aboard Blue Origin’s suborbital rocketship, the New Shepard, later this month.

Branson’s official job on his flight is to “evaluate the private astronaut experience,” and his observatio­ns will be used to “enhance the journey for all future astronaut customers,” according to Virgin’s press materials.

But Marco Caceres, a senior space analyst for the Virginia-based consulting firm Teal Group, said the Branson and Bezos ride-alongs were each “a bit of a publicity stunt.”

“If they succeed, their ventures will be taken more seriously,” Caceres said. “There’s plenty of multimilli­onaires in the world that would like to go up on an adventure, so long as they see it as relatively safe.”

Virgin Galactic and Blue Origin, along with fellow billionair­e entreprene­ur Elon Musk’s Spacex, are competing head-to-head in the emerging business of space tourism, though Musk has a big head start.

Spacex, which plans to send its first all-civilian crew (without Musk) into orbit in September, has already launched numerous cargo payloads and astronauts to the Internatio­nal Space Station.

Branson, 70, insists there is plenty of demand from wealthy would-be citizen astronauts to go around, and that he had no intention of trying to upstage Bezos.

“It’s honestly not a race,” Branson said in an interview earlier this week.

“If it’s a race, it’s a race to produce wonderful spaceships that can make many more people be able to access space. And I think that’s both of our aims.”

Virgin Galactic and Blue Origin, along with fellow billionair­e entreprene­ur Elon Musk’s Spacex, are competing head-tohead in the emerging business of space tourism

 ??  ?? Richard Branson
Richard Branson

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