Sentinel & Enterprise

Virgin Galactic finishes tests before launching customers to space

- By Susan Montoya Bryan

Virgin Galactic completed what is expected to be its final test flight Thursday before taking paying customers on brief trips to space, marking what the space tourism company described as a “fantastic achievemen­t” in what has been a long road to commercial operations.

Six of the company’s employees, including two pilots, landed at Spaceport America in southern New Mexico after the short up-and- down flight that included a few minutes of weightless­ness. It took about an hour for the mother ship to carry the spaceplane to an altitude of 44,500 feet (13,563 meters), where it was released and fired its rocket motor to make the final push.

“Successful boost, WE HAVE REACHED SPACE!” Virgin Galactic tweeted.

It reached an altitude of 54.2 miles (87 kilometers) before gliding back down to the runway, according to the company.

Jamila Gilbert, who grew up in southern New Mexico and leads the company’s internal communicat­ions, was among those on board who were evaluating what it will be like for paying customers.

It was hard for her to put the experience into words, saying it probably will take a lifetime to process the sights and the feelings that filled those moments between the rocket igniting and the spaceship reaching its highest point.

“It was just this magnetic pull,” she said in an interview. “Once I started looking out, I could feel that I was floating. I could hear voices. But I couldn’t stop looking at the planet, and I couldn’t look away.”

Fellow crew member Christophe­r Huie said it seems as if everything stopped when the spaceship was released from the carrier plane.

“You’re just waiting for the rocket to light,” said Huie, an aerospace engineer. “And I think that moment had so much anticipati­on, and I could have lived in that moment forever.”

Then came a little jostle with the firing of the rocket, and the crew were pinned to their seats as the G-forces kicked in.

The flight came nearly two years after founder Richard Branson beat fellow billionair­e and Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and rocket company Blue Origin into space. Bezos ended up flying nine days later from West Texas, and Blue Origin has since launched several passenger trips. Federal aviation authoritie­s banned Virgin Galactic launches after Branson’s flight to investigat­e a mishap.

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