Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Stratolaun­ch conducts first powered flight of new hypersonic vehicle

- By John Antczak

U.S. aerospace company Stratolaun­ch conducted the first powered test flight of a new unmanned craft for hypersonic research on Saturday and called it a success.

Hypersonic describes flights at speeds of at least Mach 5, or five times the speed of sound.

Chief Executive Officer Zachary Krevor said in a statement that the TalonA-1 vehicle “reached high supersonic speeds approachin­g Mach 5 and collected a great amount of data at an incredible value to our customers.”

Krevor said he could not release the specific altitude and speed because of proprietar­y agreements with customers.

The company's massive six-engine carrier aircraft Roc carried the Talon aloft, attached to the center of its gigantic wing, and released it off the central coast of California.

The Talon, powered by a liquid-fuel rocket engine, ended its flight by descending into the ocean as planned. While this Talon was expendable, a future version will be capable of landing on a runway for reuse.

Stratolaun­ch said the primary objectives for the flight included a safe airlaunch release of the vehicle, engine ignition, accelerati­on, sustained climb in altitude, and a controlled water landing.

The company called the result a major milestone in the developmen­t of the United States' first privately funded, reusable hypersonic test capability.

Stratolaun­ch conducted two captive-carry flights, in December and February, in which the Talon was taken aloft with live propellant but was not released from the mothership.

Stratolaun­ch is based at Mojave Air and Space Port in the Mojave Desert north of Los Angeles.

The Roc aircraft, named after an enormous mythologic­al bird, has a wingspan of 385 feet (117 meters) and twin fuselages that give the impression of two big jets flying side by side.

It was developed by Microsoft co-founder Paul G. Allen, who died just months before it flew for the first time in April 2019.

Allen intended to use it as a carrier aircraft for space launches, carrying satellite-laden rockets beneath the center of the wing and releasing them at high altitude.

That project was canceled, and new owners then repurposed Stratolaun­ch for launches of reusable hypersonic research vehicles.

Stratolaun­ch has announced flight contracts with the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory and the Navy's Multiservi­ce Advanced Capability Test Bed program as a subcontrac­tor to technology company Leidos of Reston, Virginia.

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