The Arizona Republic

Virgin Orbit reaches space on second try

- John Antczak

LOS ANGELES – 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 70-foot-long 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 U.S. universiti­es.

The launch occurred after the Boeing 747-400 took off from Mojave Air and Space Port in the desert north of Los Angeles and flew out over the Pacific Ocean 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 coasted for a period, reignited to circulariz­e the orbit and then deployed the nine CubeSats.

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, which may range in sizes comparable to a toaster on up to a home refrigerat­or.

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 Sunday.

Virgin Orbit touts the flexibilit­y of its capability to begin its missions by using airports around the globe.

Virgin Orbit 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.

Virgin Orbit is separate from Virgin Galactic, the company founded by Branson to carry passengers on suborbital hops.

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