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Raumfahrt - SpaceShipTwo führt weitere Testflüge in der Mojave durch

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11.12.2013

Sporting shiny new tail booms, SpaceShipTwo lands at the Mojave Air and Space Port after a glide flight. (Credit: Virgin Galactic)

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SpaceShipTwo performed a glide flight over the Mojave this morning. Pilots Mark Stucky of Scaled Composites and Mike Masucci of Virgin Galactic tested the ship’s nitrous oxide dump system before separating from the WhiteKnightTwo carrier aircraft and gliding to a landing at the Mojave Air and Space Port.
SpaceShipTwo had a shiny coating of reflective Kapton on the inboard sections of its two tail booms. The material is designed to allow the ship to manage temperatures from its hybrid engine.
It was SpaceShipTwo’s 30th free flight and 28th glide test. The WhiteKnightTwo mother ship made its 145th flight.
In a Tweet, Virgin Galactic said the next powered flight is coming up “soon.”  SpaceShipTwo flew under power twice earlier this year, first at the end of April and then again in the beginning of September.
Quelle: Parabolic Arc
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Update: 11.01.2014
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Success! SpaceShipTwo hits new heights during rocket test

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Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo fires its rocket engine after separating from its WhiteKnightTwo carrier plane on Friday.
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MOJAVE, Calif. — With Virgin Galactic's chief pilot behind the controls for the first time, the company's SpaceShipTwo plane reached a new high on Friday in its first supersonic rocket-powered test of 2014.

The test at Mojave Air and Space Port was aimed at setting the stage for honest-to-goodness flights into outer space later this year, and eventually for commercial space tours. 

"2014 is our year to do it for real," Mike Moses, a former space shuttle manager who now serves as Virgin Galactic's vice president of operations, told NBC News.

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SpaceShipTwo now has three rocket-powered test flights under its belt, in addition to 28 unpowered gliding flights. This time, Virgin Galactic said the 27-foot-wide winged craft went to an altitude of 71,000 feet — just beating out its previous record of 69,000 feet, set last September. Both tests involved a 20-second engine burn, boosting the plane's speed to a maximum velocity of Mach 1.4.

Moses said SpaceShipTwo went a little higher this time just because the flight profile was slightly different. "I'm sure there's a pilot competition," he joked.

This time around, Virgin Galactic and Mojave-based Scaled Composites, the plane's builder, tested a new reflective coating on the rocket plane's tail booms. The flight also marked the first tryout for a thruster system that's designed to keep the plane on course when it's above the atmosphere. Virgin Galactic said all of the test objectives were met.
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A telescopic view shows SpaceShipTwo firing its hybrid rocket engine.

Virgin flight for chief pilot
Another new twist had to do with the people behind the controls. This was the first time that a Virgin Galactic pilot sat in the cockpit for a rocket-powered flight. During the previous two powered tests, all of the flying was done by Scaled Composites' test pilots.

In a post-flight statement, Virgin Galactic chief pilot David Mackay said the flight was a "dream come true."

"I have watched SS2 evolve over the years into an incredible vehicle that is going to open up space to more people than ever before," Mackay said. “To be behind the controls and fly it as the rocket ignited is something I will never forget. She flew like a champ."

Scaled Composites test pilot Mark Stucky was beside Mackay in the cockpit. Meanwhile, Virgin Galactic's Mike Masucci and Scaled's Mike Alsbury were at the controls of SpaceShipTwo's mothership, WhiteKnightTwo. 

Virgin Galactic's CEO, George Whitesides, said the flight was "another resounding success."

“We focused on gathering more transonic and supersonic data, and our chief pilot, Dave, handled the vehicle beautifully," he said in Virgin's post-flight statement. 

Friday's flight was a scaled-down version of the experience that Virgin Galactic's passengers could enjoy as soon as this year. Almost 700 people, including celebrities like Katy Perry and Justin Bieber, have already made reservations. The current ticket price is $250,000.

For the first leg of the test flight, SpaceShipTwo was slung beneath the twin-fuselage WhiteKnightTwo. The paired planes took off from the Mojave airport at 7:20 a.m. PT (10:20 a.m. ET) and rose to a height of 46,000 feet. Then it was time to unhook SpaceShipTwo for the rocket blast.

Seconds after the release, SpaceShipTwo fired up its hybrid rocket engine and blasted upward and away from WhiteKnightTwo. After the burn, the plane continued coasting into a clear sky while Mackay tried out the thrusters. Then the pilots angled SpaceShipTwo's wings into a configuration designed to ensure a safe, stable descent.

A few minutes later, the wings were straightened again, and the plane glided back to a landing on Mojave's 12,000-foot runway. WhiteKnightTwo made its own landing minutes later.

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The glint of sunrise adds a glow to WhiteKnightTwo's takeoff with SpaceShipTwo on Friday.

Sunrise adds a glow to the scene as WhiteKnightTwo and SpaceShipTwo rise from the Mojave Air and Space Port on Friday.

Step by step to space
Virgin Galactic's test program calls for a step-by-step progression of flights that eventually cross the boundary of outer space, at an altitude of 100 kilometers (62 miles).

At that height, up to six passengers could float free in weightlessness for a few minutes, and look out the windows to see jaw-dropping views of a curving Earth beneath the black sky of space. SpaceShipTwo's pilots would use the thruster system that was tested Friday to maneuver the plane for the best views.


SpaceShipTwo is a scaled-up version of SpaceShipOne, a rocket plane that won the $10 million Ansari X Prize for private spaceflight in 2004 in Mojave and is now hanging in the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum.

Although the current test program is being conducted in Mojave, Virgin Galactic's operations are expected to shift to Spaceport America in New Mexico for passenger flights. The company's British-born billionaire founder, Richard Branson, has promised to take a seat along with his son, Sam, on the first passenger flight. 

“I couldn't be happier to start the New Year with all the pieces visibly in place for the start of full spaceflights," Branson said. "2014 will be the year when we will finally put our beautiful spaceship in her natural environment of space."

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Ground workers perform servicing on Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo rocket plane after Friday's test flight.

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Quelle: NBC

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Update:

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SpaceShipTwo flies under power for the third time. (Credit: Ken Brown)

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A couple of exclusive SpaceShipTwo pictures from my friend Ken Brown. We went out and stood atop a mountain that overlooks Koehn Lake, which is where they drop SpaceShipTwo over. The lake is maybe 20 miles north of Mojave as the crow flies.

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SpaceShipTwo lights its engine as WhiteKnightTwo flies overhead. (Credit: Ken Brown)

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Virgin Galactic successfully completed its third rocket-powered supersonic flight of its passenger carrying reuseable space vehicle, SpaceShipTwo, Friday morning in Mojave. Here the spaceship and extra chase plane circle for landing.

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Quelle: Parabolic Arc

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Update:

VIRGIN GALACTIC REACHES NEW HEIGHTS IN THIRD SUPERSONIC TEST FLIGHT

CHIEF PILOT PROVES SPACE SYSTEMS

MOJAVE, Calif. – Today, Virgin Galactic, the world’s first commercial spaceline, which is owned by Sir Richard Branson’s Virgin Group and Abu Dhabi’s aabar Investments PJS, successfully completed the third rocket-powered supersonic flight of its passenger carrying reusable space vehicle, SpaceShipTwo (SS2). In command on the flight deck of SS2 for the first time under rocket power was Virgin Galactic’s Chief Pilot Dave Mackay. Mackay, along with Scaled Composites’ (Scaled) Test Pilot Mark Stucky, tested the spaceship’s Reaction Control System (RCS) and the newly installed thermal protection coating on the vehicle’s tail booms. All of the test objectives were successfully completed.

Today’s flight departed Mojave Air and Space Port at 7:22 a.m. PST with the first stage consisting of the WhiteKnightTwo (WK2) carrier aircraft lifting SS2 to an altitude around 46,000 ft. At the controls of WK2 were Virgin Galactic Pilot Mike Masucci and Scaled Test Pilot Mike Alsbury. On release, SS2’s rocket motor was ignited, powering the spaceship to a planned altitude of 71,000 ft. – SS2’s highest altitude to date – and at a maximum speed of Mach 1.4. SS2’s unique feather re-entry system was also tested during today’s flight.

Two important SS2 systems, the RCS and thermal protection coating, were tested during today’s flight in preparation for upcoming full space flights. The spaceship’s RCS will allow its pilots to maneuver the vehicle in space, permitting an optimal viewing experience for those on board and aiding the positioning process for spacecraft re-entry. The new reflective protection coating on SS2’s inner tail boom surfaces is being evaluated to help maintain vehicle skin temperatures while the rocket motor is firing.

SS2’s propulsion system has been developed by Sierra Nevada Corp and is the world’s largest operational hybrid rocket motor. Although today’s flight saw it burn for a planned 20 seconds, the system has been successfully tested in ground firings to demonstrate performance characteristics and burn time sufficient to take the spaceship and its private astronauts to space.

Commenting on the successful test flight, Sir Richard Branson said: “I couldn’t be happier to start the New Year with all the pieces visibly in place for the start of full space flights. 2014 will be the year when we will finally put our beautiful spaceship in her natural environment of space. Today, we had our own Chief Pilot flying another flawless supersonic flight and proving the various systems required to take us safely to space, as well as providing the very best experience while we’re up there.”

This flight was the third opportunity to see a supersonic, rocket-powered test of the Virgin Galactic system after dozens of successful subsonic test flights. “Today’s flight was another resounding success,” said Virgin Galactic CEO George Whitesides. “We focused on gathering more transonic and supersonic data, and our chief pilot, Dave, handled the vehicle beautifully. With each flight test, we are progressively closer to our target of starting commercial service in 2014.”

For Mackay, the flight was a “dream come true.”

“I have watched SS2 evolve over the years into an incredible vehicle that is going to open up space to more people than ever before,” he said. “To be behind the controls and fly it as the rocket ignited is something I will never forget. She flew brilliantly. All the tests went really well and generated vital data that will be used to further fine-tune our operations.”

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Quelle: Virgin Galactic

 

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