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Home / Business / Companies / Freight and logistics

Unity 22: How Sir Richard Branson will ride his own rocket to space tomorrow

NZ Herald
10 Jul, 2021 07:41 PM6 mins to read

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Richard Branson and the Virgin Galactic team heading to space with him. Photo / Virgin Galactic

Richard Branson and the Virgin Galactic team heading to space with him. Photo / Virgin Galactic

Sir Richard Branson is shooting himself off into outerspace in just a few hours, in what is already a true space race, as the Virgin billionaire rushes to beat Amazon's Jeff Bezos as the first rich man to leave the planet.

Virgin Galactic will become the first rocket company to launch the boss when Richard Branson straps into one of his sleek, shiny space planes this weekend.

The self-described tie-loathing adventurer and troublemaker will join five company employees for Sunday's test flight from New Mexico's southern desert — the company's fourth trip to the edge of space.

Branson assigned himself to Virgin Galactic's first full-scale crew, jumping ahead of Blue Origin's Jeff Bezos, an even richer rocketeer looking to launch himself into space.

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Bezos' liftoff is set for July 20 from West Texas.

Here's all you need to know about the first blast-off of the two-man billionaire space race.

When and how to watch

These things are heavily reliant on weather conditions so it's nearly impossible to schedule it down to the minute but Branson is expected to jet off to space around 1am Monday (NZT).

Virgin Galactic will be livestreaming the event.

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A star-studded space affair

The livestreaming event will be hosted by comedian Stephen Colbert.

Grammy-nominated singer Khalid will perform his new song, "New Normal", at the landing site after Branson's return to Earth, according to Rolling Stone.

I’m going to Spaceport America with @VirginGalactic on 7/11 to premiere my single “New Normal” at the launch of #Unity22 with @RichardBranson. Watch it live on https://t.co/9UqwiMG8me. See you guys there 🚀

— Khalid (@thegreatkhalid) July 9, 2021

Boss on board

Just a week shy of turning 71, the London-born founder of the Virgin Group says he's "not apprehensive at all and it is the dream of a lifetime" to ride into space.

The longtime fitness fanatic put in extra effort to prepare for the brief up-and-down flight. "I'm in my 70s now so you either let yourself go or you get fit and enjoy life."

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His wife, children and grandchildren will be there as he climbs aboard the rocket plane that's attached to a dual-fuselage aircraft for takeoff.

During the three to four minutes of weightlessness, "I'll be looking back at our beautiful Earth and taking it all in and realise that only 500 other people have done this". Closer to 600, actually, but still a relatively small number. Upon landing, he'll celebrate with "a great, great grin on my face".

Who else is flying

Two pilots are needed to fly the rocket plane from the time it's released from the mothership to shoot into space until it glides down to a runway.

The team of astronauts and Branson. Photo / Twitter
The team of astronauts and Branson. Photo / Twitter

It will be the third trip to space for chief pilot David Mackay, a Scottish-born test pilot for the Royal Air Force who went on to fly for Branson's Virgin Atlantic, and the second for chief flight instructor Michael Masucci.

Chief astronaut instructor Beth Moses, a former Nasa engineer, is also launching for the second time. Joining Branson as space rookies are lead operations engineer Colin Bennett and Sirisha Bandla, a vice president. The six will grab a lift from mothership pilots CJ Sturckow, a former Nasa astronaut, and Kelly Latimer.

“We are here for something bigger than ourselves. The ultimate dream is to one day have space travel for everyone.” – Chief Astronaut Instructor Beth Moses. Meet the @VirginGalactic Mission Specialists who will be in the cabin with me for our upcoming spaceflight #Unity22 pic.twitter.com/nkCYBx7Vm5

— Richard Branson (@richardbranson) July 5, 2021

Rocket plane

Virgin Galactic's space plane, Unity, will take off attached to a specially designed double aircraft nicknamed Eve after Branson's late mother.

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After reaching nearly 50,000 feet (15,000m), the plane will be released and drop for a moment or two before its rocket motor ignites to send the craft on a steep climb toward space, exceeding 3Gs, or three times the force of Earth's gravity. The motor will shut off once the craft reaches space — a maximum altitude of about 55 miles (88km) is anticipated — enveloping the ship in silence as everyone but the pilots unbuckle, float and gaze out the 17 windows at Earth and the black void of space.

3 days until #Unity22! Come inside the hangar for pre-flight preparations as our spaceship VSS Unity joins forces with our mothership VMS Eve. Watch the launch live this Sunday at 6 am PT | 9 am ET | 2 pm BST. https://t.co/WEBNyUYpRQ pic.twitter.com/xakebHTN5T

— Virgin Galactic (@virgingalactic) July 8, 2021

After a few minutes of weightlessness, the occupants will strap back in as the plane reorients itself for entry — folding up its wings, then folding them back down in unique technique known as feathering. The rocket plane will glide back, Nasa space shuttle style, to conclude about 15 minutes of free flight.

Track record

Founded in 2004, Virgin Galactic got its start when Branson teamed up with aircraft designer Burt Rutan to provide the necessary spaceship technology. A 2007 rocket motor test in California's Mojave Desert left three workers dead and three more injured. Then in 2014 the rocket plane Enterprise — named after the "Star Trek" ship — broke apart during a test flight, killing one pilot and seriously injuring the other.

Unity, the replacement ship named by the late physicist Stephen Hawking, began flight tests in 2016. It made its first trip to the edge of space with two pilots in 2018 and the second in 2019, both times from Mojave. The operations moved to New Mexico's Spaceport America, from where the plane soared on May 22 to achieve the company's third spaceflight.

What's next

After Branson's launch, Virgin Galactic plans two more test flights this summer and fall before inviting paying customers on board.

The next one will include more company employees, and the last will have Italian Air Force members conducting research.

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If all goes well, the first of the more than 600 confirmed ticket holders will climb aboard next year. The company plans to reopen reservations once Branson soars. Initial tickets went for $US250,000 (NZ$360,000); no word on whether that will change. Branson promises a surprise after his ride to "give more people the chance to become an astronaut — because space belongs to us all."

In the meantime, scientists are lining up for research rides, including Southwest Research Institute's Alan Stern, who was behind Nasa's New Horizons mission to Pluto and beyond.

- With AP

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