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Virgin Galactic races ahead of Blue Origin in ‘battle of the billionaires’

written by Hannah Dowling | July 2, 2021

SpaceShipTwo in a captive flight configuration underneath White Knight Two (WikiCommons)
SpaceShipTwo in a captive flight configuration underneath White Knight Two (WikiCommons)

Virgin Galactic’s Sir Richard Branson will claim the title of the first billionaire to blast off to suborbital space aboard his own company’s rocket, having just announced a spaceflight booked for nine days ahead of rival Jeff Bezos’ planned flight.

In the latest battle of the billionaires, Branson and Bezos have both been vying to be the first to travel to space via their own company’s rocket – with Sir Richard now looking likely to claim the title.

Not more than a day after Amazon founder Bezos announced that he would be taking a seat aboard his space venture Blue Origin’s first crewed flight into suborbital space on 20 July, rumours began to surface that Sir Richard would attempt to make his space debut first.

Virgin Galactic has now confirmed that the British billionaire will be taking his seat aboard the next crewed spaceflight on 11 July, pending weather and technical checks – nine days ahead of Bezos.

Both Branson’s Virgin Galactic and Bezos’ Blue Origin ventures are working hard to create a new trend of ‘space tourism’, in which their dedicated ‘spaceplanes’ perform brief jaunts into suborbital space, just above the Earth’s atmosphere, for minutes at a time.

On his inaugural spaceflight, Sir Richard will join a full crew of two pilots and three mission specialists aboard Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipTwo dubbed VSS Unity – a six-passenger, two-pilot craft that is designed to make brief jaunts to suborbital space. SpaceShipTwo takes off from a runway beneath the wing of a carrier plane called WhiteKnightTwo.

WhiteKnightTwo carries the spaceplane to an altitude of about 50,000 feet, where SpaceShipTwo drops free and makes its own way to suborbital space.

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Initial rumours, sparked by California-based space reporter Doug Messier, suggested Sir Richard would make his space debut on the US 4 July long weekend, meaning he would touch the edge of space about two weeks prior to Bezos.

However, the flight was subject to the US Federal Aviation Administration issuing Virgin Galactic with a commercial reusable operator’s license prior to the planned flight – which permits non-employees to take part in spaceflights.

While he is a founder and financier, Sir Richard is currently not considered an employee.

However, Messier’s source said Virgin Galactic had submitted the final two verification reports required to obtain the necessary operator’s licence, based off the previous flight tests of VSS Unity.

It now appears all permits have been approved, and Sir Richard will be able to blast off by 11 July.

Sir Richard has long specified that he intends to fly aboard VSS Unity before the company launches public commercial spaceflights, slotted for 2022.

According to Virgin Galactic, about 600 people have already bought their ticket to ride SpaceShipTwo when it is in full operation, each paying around $250,000 for the privilege.

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