. 24/7 Space News .
Space Travel Will Take Off In Five Years

Tourism of the future...
by Staff Writers
London (AFP) Aug 9, 2006
Commercial flights to space could be taking off from Britain within five years, the head of the space travel firm Virgin Galactic said Wednesday. Will Whitehorn said the Lossiemouth Royal Air Force base in Moray, in Scotland, is on track to be used as a base for the company's spacecraft from 2011.

Virgin Galactic, owned by billionaire British entrepreneur Richard Branson, will charge 110,000 pounds (209,600 dollars, 162,900 euros) a ticket to give passengers to experience weightlessness for five minutes.

It plans to operate around seven spacecraft that will fly 87 miles (156 kilometres) above the earth's surface.

Whitehorn, speaking after a visit to the base on Wednesday, said: "I met with all the officers on the base today and we agreed it was perfectly technically feasible."

Virgin Galactic's main base will be located in New Mexico, in the United States, Whitehorn said, with "satellite" stations at other sites around the world.

Passengers would be sent up in a spaceship attached to a separate airplane, with the two craft separating at an altitude of about 49,000 feet (14,900 metres).

The spacecraft would then leave the Earth's atmosphere for about 15 minutes, including five minutes of weightlessness.

Test flights are due to start in California next year, and commercial flights could begin three years later. Five spaceships and two aircraft are being built over the next four years.

Virgin Galactic said last month it had taken 200 bookings for its space flights.

Source: Agence France-Presse

Related Links
Rocket Science News at Space-Travel.Com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Ex-Microsoft Whizz-Kid Passes Space Flight Medical
Moscow (AFP) Aug 10, 2006
Renowned software developer Charles Simonyi has passed the medical test needed to become a "space tourist", the Space Adventures company that arranges private space travel said Thursday. "We at Space Adventures congratulate Charles and look forward to his launch," Space Adventures said in a statement.







  • Ex-Microsoft Whizz-Kid Passes Space Flight Medical
  • Space Travel Will Take Off In Five Years
  • Pioneering Astrophysicist James Van Allen Dies
  • Space Missions Become More Challenging

  • Applicants From 16 Countries Seek To Join Simulated Mars Flight
  • Opportunity Recovers from Brief Operational Anomaly
  • Russia To Stage Mock Mission To Mars
  • Arctic Mars Analog Svalbard Expedition

  • Ariane 5 Is In The Launch Zone With JCSAT-10 And Syracuse 3B
  • Russia To Launch European Weather Probe In October
  • ATK Receives $90M To Supply Motors For Missile Defense And Satellite Launch Vehicles
  • Second Ariane 5 ECA Launch Campaign Is Underway At The Spaceport

  • MODIS Images Western Wildfires
  • CloudSat Captures Hurricane Daniel's Transformation
  • Senators Collins And Lieberman Write To Griffin Over NASA Dumping 'Mission To Earth'
  • Google Earth Impacts Science

  • Nine Years To The Ninth Planet And Counting
  • IAU Approves Names For Two Small Plutonian Moons
  • Three Trojan Asteroids Share Neptune Orbit
  • New Horizons Crosses The Asteroid Belt

  • SNAP Wins NASA Support for Joint Dark Energy Mission
  • GLAST Burst Monitor One Step Closer To Tracking Most Powerful Explosions In Universe
  • A Cosmic Rain Lasting 30000 Years
  • Seeing Ourselves In Comets

  • SMART-1 Towards Final Impact
  • Linking The Earth To The Moon
  • Japan Plans Moon Base By 2030
  • NASA Chooses LM For LRO Launch Services

  • Lockheed Martin Completes Fifth Modernized GPS Satellite
  • Raytheon Completes Demonstration of Space-Based Navigation System in India
  • SENS Simplex Service Extends to Mexico
  • Cracking The Secret Codes Of The European Galileo Satellite Network

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement