Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

BRANSON POISED TO FINISH FIRST IN BILLIONAIR­ES’ SPACE RACE THIS WEEKEND

- BY MARCIA DUNN

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Two billionair­es are putting everything on the line this month to ride their own rockets into space.

It’s intended to be a flashy confidence boost for customers seeking their own short joyrides.

The lucrative, high-stakes chase for space tourists will unfold on the fringes of space — 55 miles to 66 miles up, pitting Virgin Galactic’s Richard Branson against the world’s richest man, Blue Origin’s Jeff Bezos.

Branson is due to take off Sunday from New Mexico, launching with two pilots and three other employees aboard a rocket plane carried aloft by a double-fuselage aircraft.

Bezos departs nine days later from West Texas, blasting off in a fully automated capsule with three guests: his brother, an 82-year-old female aviation pioneer who’s waited six decades for a shot at space and the winner of a $28 million charity auction.

Branson’s flight will be longer, but Bezos’ will be higher.

Branson’s craft has more windows, but Bezos’ windows are bigger.

Branson’s piloted plane has already flown to space three times. Bezos’ has five times as many test flights, though none with people on board.

Either way, they’re shooting for sky-high bragging rights as the first person to fly his own rocket to space and experience three to four minutes of weightless­ness.

Branson, who turns 71 in another week, considers it “very important” to try it out before allowing space tourists on board. He insists he’s not apprehensi­ve; this is the thrillseek­ing adventurer who’s kite-surfed across the English Channel and attempted to circle the world in a hot air balloon.

“As a child, I wanted to go to space. When that did not look likely for my generation, I registered the name Virgin Galactic with the notion of creating a company that could make it happen,” Branson wrote in a blog last week. Seventeen years after founding Virgin Galactic, he’s on the cusp of experienci­ng space for himself.

“It’s amazing where an idea can lead you, no matter how far-fetched it may seem at first.”

Bezos, 57, who stepped down Monday as Amazon’s CEO, announced in early June that he’d be on his New Shepard rocket’s first passenger flight, choosing the 52nd anniversar­y of Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin’s moon landing.

Branson was supposed to fly later this year on the second of three more test flights planned by Virgin Galactic before flying ticket holders next year. But late last week, he leapfrogge­d ahead.

He insists he’s not trying to beat Bezos and that it’s not a race. Yet his announceme­nt came just hours after Bezos revealed he’d be joined in space by Wally Funk, one of the last surviving members of the so-called Mercury 13. The 13 female pilots never made it to space despite passing the same tests in the early 1960s as NASA’s original, all-male Mercury 7 astronauts.

Bezos hasn’t commented publicly on Branson’s upcoming flight.

But some at Blue Origin already are nitpicking the fact that their capsule surpasses the designated Karman line of space 62 miles up, while Virgin Galactic’s peak altitude is 55 miles. Internatio­nal aeronautic and astronauti­c federation­s in Europe recognize the Karman line as the official boundary between the upper atmosphere and space, while NASA, the Air Force, the Federal Aviation Administra­tion and some astrophysi­cists accept a minimum altitude of 50 miles.

 ?? DON EMMERT/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Virgin Galactic’s Richard Branson, 70, insists he’s not apprehensi­ve about his planned space flight.
DON EMMERT/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Virgin Galactic’s Richard Branson, 70, insists he’s not apprehensi­ve about his planned space flight.

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