Aerotech News and Review, June 16 2017
P. 1

SpaceShipTwo completes another successful glide flight
Photographs by Peter W. Merlin
by Peter W. Merlin
special to Aerotech News
Virgin Galactic’s second SpaceShipTwo vehicle, VSS Unity, took to the skies June 1 for its fifth glide flight.
It was the ninth time the craft has been carried aloft be- neath the twin-hulled WhiteKnightTwo mother ship.
The previous test flight demonstrated a unique “feather- ing” mechanism that will allow the craft to decelerate during reentry from space. The test explored the vehicle’s low- speed handling characteristics, particularly during maneu- vers with an aft center-of-gravity.
To achieve required test conditions, a ballast tank contain- ing 1,000 pounds of water was installed in the rear of the spaceship’s fuselage.
As Unity dropped away from the WhiteKnightTwo, Virgin Galactic chief pilot Dave Mackay and co-pilot Rick “CJ” Sturckow practiced maneuvers similar to those they will experience during later, rocket-powered flights. During de- scent, they jettisoned the water ballast to confirm expected changes in the vehicle’s handling characteristics as the cen-
June 16, 2017 • Volume 31, Issue 10
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ter of gravity moved forward. The flight ended with a safe landing at Mojave Air and Space Port. The mother ship, crewed by pilots Kelly Latimer and Mike Masucci and flight test engineer Colin Bennett, touched down a short while later.
In a subsequent statement, an unidentified company spokesman said the success of these tests represented an important milestone toward ending the initial glide test por- tion of the program. As the SpaceShipTwo test team turns its attention to the vehicle’s propulsion system, engine integra- tion and ground testing will be followed by powered flights to expand the spaceship’s performance envelope.
The privately funded space company owned by Sir Rich- ard Branson’s Virgin Group and Abu Dhabi’s Aabar Invest- ments PJS has been developing the vehicle to take passen- gers to the edge of space on a ballistic rocket ride followed by a gentle glide to a runway landing.
So far, approximately 500 people have signed up to take a ride in SpaceShipTwo at ticket prices of around $250,000. In April, Virgin Galactic CEO George Whitesides announced that the company hoped to begin commercial flights in 2018.
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