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Quantum fluctuations in space, science, exploration and other cosmic fields... served up regularly by MSNBC.com science editor Alan Boyle since 2002.

Alan Boyle covers the physical sciences, anthropology, technological innovation and space science and exploration for MSNBC.com. He is a winner of the AAAS Science Journalism Award, the NASW Science-in-Society Award and other honors; a contributor to "A Field Guide for Science Writers"; and a member of the board of the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing.

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First look at SpaceShipTwo

Posted: Wednesday, January 23, 2008 11:48 AM by Alan Boyle


Virgin Galactic

Artwork shows Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo with wings in the "feathered" position.
Click on the image to see a slide show of concepts and the construction process.


The new designs for Virgin Galactic's SpaceShipTwo rocket plane and WhiteKnightTwo mothership were unveiled in New York today, and they include some unexpected twists. In fact, you could be excused if you think you're seeing double, or even triple.

Today's event was the most detailed look yet at the craft that will carry on the legacy of SpaceShipOne, the first commercially developed spaceship and winner of the $10 million Ansari X Prize in 2004.

The biggest twist is that the WhiteKnightTwo plane has spread out and sprouted another passenger cabin on its 140-foot-long wing. The two cabins and four Pratt & Whitney jet engines straddle a central mount for the rocket plane, which will be carried to an altitude of 50,000 feet and dropped. Then SpaceShipTwo will light up its hybrid rocket engine for the final push to the edge of outer space, reaching an altitude of at least 68 miles (110 kilometers).

The twin cabins are basically carbon copies of the SpaceShipTwo cabin, so riding on WhiteKnightTwo will give passengers a taste of what the big blast to space will be like. While commercial astronauts are taking their trip to see the curving earth below the black sky of space, the passengers on WhiteKnightTwo will experience a lower-altitude version of the experience - including a bit of zero-G.

Burt Rutan, the craft's designer and head of California-based Scaled Composites, imagined a scenario in which a husband riding in the mothership watches his wife take off in the spaceship, sitting only 25 feet away.

"You'll say, 'Honey, have a nice flight,'" Rutan told scores of journalists and dignitaries at the American Museum of Natural History. "While she is enjoying black sky and weightlessness, you, in the launch airplane, will be doing parabolas and floating about the cabin."


Stan Honda / AFP - Getty Images
Richard Branson, the billionaire founder of the Virgin Group, and Scaled
Composites aerospace designer Burt Rutan unveil scale models of the
WhiteKnightTwo carrier aircraft, at left, and the SpaceShipTwo rocket plane amid hoopla at the American Museum of Natural History.

SpaceShipTwo is designed to carry six passengers and two pilots into space, with enough headroom to allow for free floating. It's about twice as large as SpaceShipOne, with 18-inch-wide windows and reclining seats for fare-paying fliers.

More than 100 people are already in line for spaceflights, at a cost of $200,000 per person, and Rutan expects there to be thousands more: He said the innovations incorporated into SpaceShipTwo will make human spaceflight "at least as safe as the airliners of the late '20s."

One of the reporters was surprised at that: Shouldn't spaceflight ideally be as safe as commercial aviation is today?

"Don't believe anyone who tells you that the entry level of new spaceships will be as safe as the modern airliner," Rutan responded. He noted that the fatality rate for orbital spaceflight has been 4 percent, and that he was aiming for the suborbital SpaceShipTwo to be "hundreds of times safer."

When will it fly?
Virgin Galactic said work on SpaceShipTwo was nearly 60 percent complete, and WhiteKnightTwo was more than 80 percent complete.

In the past, Virgin Galactic has said passenger flights could start in the 2009-2010 time frame - but that was before last July's fatal accident at Scaled Composites' Mojave testing ground. The development of SpaceShipTwo's rocket engine has been held up because of the accident investigation, and today Virgin Galactic is saying only that WhiteKnightTwo will go into flight tests later this year. Gliding drop tests of the SpaceShipTwo craft, sans engine, could begin this year as well, said Stephen Attenborough, Virgin Galactic's commercial director.

"This is very unlikely to be a program that will be delivered on a straight line," Attenborough told me.

Several would-be passengers attended today's event, and were easily recognizable because of their black Virgin-branded flight suits. Perveen Crawford, Virgin Galactic's first paid-up customer from Hong Kong, told me that she was ready to go anytime.

"It doesn't matter how it looks, just take me up there," she said.

Virgin Galactic's founder, British billionaire Richard Branson, has said he'll give his 89-year-old father, Edward, a ride on SpaceShipTwo as a sign of his confidence in its safety. "They'll have to do it fairly quickly, or I won't be around," Edward Branson told me jokingly after the news conference.

Edward Branson hasn't yet gone through astronaut training, but 80 other fliers-to-be have taken practice sessions at the NASTAR Center in Pennsylvania. Passengers are expected to endure accelerations of up to 3.5 times Earth's gravity, or 3.5 G's, on the way up - and up to 6 G's coming down. NASTAR's centrifuge duplicates that flight profile for training purposes.


Stan Honda / AFP - Getty Images
British billionaire Richard Branson and aerospace designer Burt Rutan
hold up a scale model of the SpaceShipTwo rocket plane hitched
aboard its WhiteKnightTwo carrier aircraft after today's news briefing.

In the wake of the centrifuge sessions, Attenborough said two fliers have withdrawn from the flight program because of health concerns, and three have delayed their training - which translates into a higher-than-expected 93 percent success rate.

People wouldn't necessarily be the only payload: Virgin Galactic President Will Whitehorn said the WhiteKnightTwo air-launch system could also be adapted for putting satellites into orbit. Even on the passenger flights, scientific experiments could ride along just as they do on government-supported spaceflights, "helping to answer key questions about climate and the mysteries of the universe," Richard Branson said.

Making their mark
Compared with the pointy-nosed look of SpaceShipOne, the cabin designs for SpaceShipTwo and WhiteKnightTwo look a bit more rounded, more like a business jet than a Looney Tunes rocketship. The white-and-red colors of the first commercial spaceship were replaced on the scale models shown today with a white, blue and black motif.

The twin tails and the belly of the SpaceShipTwo craft were emblazoned with a design based on the iris of Richard Branson's eye.

Branson had history on his mind as he addressed today's audience.

"2008 really will be the year of the spaceship," he said. Later on, Branson was asked whether he hoped he'd go down in history for backing the first commercial spaceline. Branson quickly gave the credit to Rutan, but then noted that everyone would like to leave their mark on earth.

"I suppose we'd all like to make our mark when we're out of Earth, too," Branson said.

You can get your own look at the new design concepts at Virgin Galactic. And stay tuned for further updates later today, here on the Log.

Update for 5 p.m. ET: Some of the folks posting comments have noted that Branson has positioned himself as a champion of climate consciousness as well as commercial spaceflight. During comments at this morning's news conference as well as at an afternoon session, Branson tried to address that pairing.

He noted that environmentalist James Lovelock was among the first to sign up for a seat on SpaceShipTwo. "He's told me that he thinks this project is one of the most important industrial projects of the 21st century," Branson said.

Branson also downplayed aviation's contribution to greenhouse-gas production. He argued that "seemingly benign" factors such as information technology were actually bigger contributors to the carbon dioxide problem - and that space technologies could make a big contribution to analyzing and even solving environmental ills.

This afternoon's audience was aimed primarily at space boosters rather than journalists, and there was somewhat more whooping and hollering as Branson and Rutan gave their spiel. That brought a smile to Rutan's lips. 

"This is a better crowd ... I've always said that my best talks are when there's absolutely no press at all," Rutan joked.

Update for 7 p.m. ET: I just wanted to point out that we have a slide show that gives you a look at the artist's conceptions as well as the real-world work being done on SpaceShipTwo and WhiteKnightTwo (which Virgin Galactic officials say just might be named Black Knight 1 because it's so different from WhiteKnightOne). If you missed the slide show the first time around, take it out for a spin.

I've also put together another Log posting focusing on the impact of last year's fatal accident at Scaled Composites, which has held up Rutan's rocket development schedule.

Update for 10:50 a.m. ET Jan. 24: We've put together a must-see video report about the SpaceShipTwo design unveiling.

Update for 12:50 a.m. ET Jan. 25: Newsweek interviews "Rocket Boy" engineer Homer Hickam about SpaceShipTwo and its flightworthiness.

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Comments

This is fantastic. It is the private companies that will take spaceflight from an expensive government affair to routine. Unfortunately, there are restrictive regulations that unnecessarily hamper development in this regard. Go to www.actionforspace.com and tell the congressmen that they need to promote better laws to foster the development of commercial spaceflight.
A new age in space travel is about to arrive later this year and finally no congressional budget over sight or non space orientted presidental candidates (Obama who wants to push back manned space travel) can stop it. Maybe we'll get get to the Moon yet, except it will be through private types like Virgin Galactic and Spacex.
Slick ideas.  I'm sure that if we all had a spare 200k laying around that we might entertain the idea of going up.  I'm just waiting for the Virgin Galactic Station/Hotel for the honeymooners that really want to go all out.  Nice of Branson to make it seem like he has no ego either.  How refreshing.
I can't wait to do parabolas in space!  It looks great!  Great Post!
I can see the pilot wrestling with the controls and praying during launch sequence and re-entry...just like the guy from SpaceShipOne.
Whirlygigs in space...Hooey!
click my name for the solution...
more concept art please!
As safe as an airliner from the 20s...  I find that hardly reassuring when I'm spending $200,000
Congrats to Rutan and Branson. My question is how scaleable is this system might be to reaching orbit? Obviously it would require a much more substantial burn, but would an evolution of this design be able to make it to, say, the ISS? Anyone care to comment?
On July 26, 2007, there were lives lost in the making of SpaceShip Two, however, Scaled Composites and Burt Rutan are not recognizing these three men as leaving their marks on this earth for something they believed in . . .  SpaceShip Two.  Already these three men have been forgotten and their families have not received consideration in monetary ways for their loss.  
Go, Baby, Go!
Very cool! I wish I had $200,000! But I am only a teacher! You should offer free flights for teachers, especially the ones like me who are always talking about getting private enterprise going in space!
Godspeed gentlemen.
All I can say is,
"Fly me to the moon
And let me play among the stars
Let me see what spring is like
On Jupiter and Mars....."
Absolutely Rediculous... Thats all that I can say.
What are the energy requirements when compared to the current method of achieving space flight per 1000 kg of total mass?  Is it indeed more efficient or is this simply a means to get the public support of more routine space flight and to turn a profit?
I have been waiting for this. Hats off to Branson, Rutan and the rest of the team for getting us on our way to the future of space travel and exploration as well as an increasingly rapid development of the technologies that will get us there safer, faster and more efficiently.
Space travel? When? People keep talking about it. Keep expecting more talk. When I say "travel" I mean it literally. We want action.
I saw the first generation at Osh Kosh. Very impressive.  I am wondering if this design is capable of orbit or just a vertical ascent / descent?
I'm in !! resrvation $ 125489-5874569HG
I live in Las Cruces, New Mexico, 40 miles south of Spaceport America.  And I'm looking forward to seeing this amazing craft lifting from the same land over which America's first highway ran ... El Camino Real de Tierra Adentro ... 4 centuries ago.  Just like Juan Onate brought 500 colonists north from Mexico, Rutan and Branson will be opening the heavens for present and future colonists.
Oh,Please!
I WANNAGO, I  WANNAGO !!!!
Another Great Job by Virgin!  They prove that the people and just not the government can enjoy space travel at a reasonable expense!
I wouldnt fly in that thing if you paid me 1 Million. NASA couldnt get to the moon today if they tried. The space program is a waste of money and lives because like everything else made in America it falls apart. Every space tourist can watch as their shuttle loses parts on the way to nowhere.
finally we will be able to see the aliens and space ships theres out there.  Its about time we see the truth.
A few days ago, MSNBC posted an article stating that this company was fined over $28K for lack of safety resulting in an accident that killed 3 and seriously injured 3 others.  So far, there has been no mention of civil suits from the victims or their families that surely will be in the several millions.  The timing of this announcement seems highly inappropriate; especially given there has been no public demonstration of any effective corrective action in their engineering design and test practices.  I think this company has a very long way to go before the public would have any confidence in their ability to safely design and operate a spacecraft, albeit a rocket powered airplane.  Perhaps people of the likes of Paris Hilton and other high net worth individuals signing up for tickets are extreme/high risk takers.
cool
Hey, maybe NASA should comtract with Virgin Spaceways and Rutan for the next shuttle or probably hire them to do the work of the shuttle.
This must be the ultimate $200,000 joy ride.  I'm glad that, during the coming depression, there will be still be first class entertainment for the remaining rich people.
To ugly to travel on! I think I will keep my money instead.
Lame.
Incredible collaboration! I can't wait to see the video of the passenger's faces when weightlessness kicks in!
I wonder why NASA hasn't encorporated any of Rutan's ideas.  
the most fabulous idea to become reality in a baby boomers lifetime..the horseless carriage,t.v. radio,telephone,microwave,and any other state of the art idea has nothing on this concept!! know if we can just balance the the budjet! god-speed and good luck!
Yee Haw!  Now they just need to put a jump door in so the extreme skydivers can get in on the act!
I am curious as to what degree you are going to evolve your "feathering" re-entry technique on these craft. As spacecraft size and payload increase, it will certainly become a major issue before too long.
What would be the the square-footage of feathering surface required per pound of payload ?
Do you realistically anticipate using this technique with a spacecraft of the same capacity as the existing space shuttle and roughly speaking, what would be the feathering surface area required ?
Thanks.
According to another MSNBC article, 26,000 children ages 0-5 years of age die EVERY DAY because of malnutrition and no access to simple childhood vaccinations and we're all expected to stand up and cheer because a bunch of rich SOBs are going to experience space flight? [...]
will they send ashes of someone up with the ship to be left in space? Will there be a stopping place for an emergency in space? Are they required to be conectable with the space station?
If I only had an extra $200,000 sitting around. Anyone want to sponser me? :D
Who cares about this garbage?!  With all the problems of war, disease and poverty in our world, why are we spending time worrying about a handful of millionaires who want to float about in space just for the fun of it?  Absolutely pathetic.
...kinda makes you wonder why the ultra-rich people are in such a hurry to get to space...perhaps they know something the rest of us do not...
Very exciting!! Makes me wish I was 40 years younger so I would be around to see what the future will bring next! I would be the first in line to go if I could. I envy those who will blaze the trail. Good Luck to all those who will.
I can't wait to see how much a ride on those puppies will cost!
Looks a lot like the old DYNA-SOAR forward fuselage don't it?
Why would anyone take this seriously?
Not too many years from now, space ship Two will take it's place at the National Air and Space Museum. Along  with Space Ship One.
There with the Concorde SST, these craft will be symbols of failed technology. Misplaced dreams and unwarranted hype.
Space travel is now, and will remain the province of governments. For a very long time to come.
The cost of a ticket, ($200,000) is an obscene amount of money for anyone to spend on a pointless joyride. Not to mention the extreme danger the passengers will be exposed to.
The cost of operating these vehicles is no doubt being under estimated. Cost will certainly climb. A ticket to ride is out of range for 99% percent of the population.
There is some real delusional thinking going on here. Or maybe it's all a joke. Time will tell
And so now space exploration has fallen from great advances in technology, to little more than re-engeering old concepts.  In terms of technological and scientific advances, this is little more then the Segway with wings.  Another classic example of media hype of science, without any actual new science being involved.
Can that plane survive re-enter heats.  I see no protection on the body of the aircraft and what about the pressure on the wings on re-entering?
Beautiful design.  I hope that testing goes well and they can meet there schedule.  Looks like a real spaceship!
PlanetSpace.com
What a great, positive vision this is.
Tomorrow will come and these good people
will help bring our dreams forward.
Thank You
JPD
what a piece of.Hey why dont u put wings on a Ford Pinto or a Chrysler PT Cruiser thats just as good as that. Think diffeent u know the bigger picture.


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