Lodi News-Sentinel

Virgin Galactic’s new spaceship makes first glide test

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MOJAVE — Virgin Galactic’s new spaceship successful­ly completed its first free flight with a glide test over the Mojave Desert, the company said.

The craft was carried aloft Saturday morning by its mothership, released at an altitude of 50,000 feet and, with pilots Mark Stuck and Dave Mackay in the cockpit, glided for 10 minutes to a landing at Mojave Air and Space Port.

The spaceship, named Unity, had previously been flown on captive-carry flights in which it remained attached to the wing of the mothership, a specially designed jet name WhiteKnigh­tTwo.

Virgin Galactic said there will be many glide flights to confirm how it performs in real-world conditions before testing proceeds to rocketpowe­red flights.

The company said on its website that flight data and informatio­n from the pilots indicated it went “extremely well, but we’ll take the time to properly and thoroughly analyze the vehicle’s performanc­e before clearing the vehicle for our next test.”

The craft is the second developed under Virgin Galactic’s plan for a fleet of ships that will carry passengers on thrill rides to space and back.

Virgin Galactic’s first spaceship broke apart in 2014 during its fourth rocket-powered test flight when the copilot prematurel­y unlocked a system used for slowing the vehicle during re-entry into the atmosphere.

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