VSS Unity
VSS Unity, previously referred to as VSS Voyager, is a SpaceShipTwo-class suborbital rocket-powered crewed spaceplane. It is the second SpaceShipTwo to be built and will be used as part of the Virgin Galactic fleet. It first reached an altitude of 80 km on December 13, 2018.
The spacecraft was rolled out on 19 February 2016
and completed ground-based system integration testing in September 2016, prior to its first flight on 8 September 2016.
In September 2019 commercial suborbital spaceflights were expected to start sometime in 2020.
Overview
VSS Unity, the second SpaceShipTwo suborbital spaceplane for Virgin Galactic, is the first SpaceShipTwo built by The Spaceship Company. The ship's name was announced on 19 February 2016. Prior to the naming announcement, the craft was referred to as SpaceShipTwo, Serial Number Two. There was speculation in 2004 that Serial Number Two would be named VSS Voyager, an unofficial name that was repeatedly used in media coverage. The name Unity was chosen by British physicist Stephen Hawking. Hawking's eye is also used as the model for the eye logo on the side of Unity.History
The manufacture of Unity began in 2012. The spacecraft's registration, N202VG, was filed in September 2014. As of early November 2014, the build of Unity was about 90 percent structurally complete, and 65 percent complete overall.As of April 2015, initial ground tests of Unity were projected to be able to begin as early as late 2015,
after being projected as early as mid-2015 as of November 2014.
On 21 May 2015, Unity reached the milestone of bearing the weight of the airframe on its own wheels.
The spaceship was unveiled on 19 February 2016, as Virgin Galactic founder Richard Branson had projected in November 2015; ground and flight testing commenced thereafter.
VSS Unity is the second SpaceShipTwo to be completed; the first, VSS Enterprise, was destroyed in a crash in late October 2014.
After rollout and unveiling, a phase of testing called "Integrated Vehicle Ground Testing" began on VSS Unity in February 2016.
Test flight program
VSS Unity will undergo a test regimen similar to VSS Enterprise, then will embark on testing beyond what Enterprise experienced. The test flights are expected to be fewer, as Enterprise has already tested the design's responses under numerous conditions. For each flight test, the White Knight Two aircraft carries Unity to altitude. Testing began with captive carry flights, in which Unity was not released from its carrier aircraft. Testing then progressed to free-flight glide testing, and will continue with powered test flights. It is possible that only 2-3 flights under each regime previously tested will be performed, instead of the 5 or 10 that Enterprise performed.On 8 September 2016, Virgin Galactic commenced flight testing of Unity with a captive-carry flight.
On 1 November 2016, Virgin Galactic conducted another captive-carry flight of Unity but cancelled the glide portion of the flight because of wind speed. On 3 November and 30 November, additional captive-carry flights took place.
In July 2017, Richard Branson suggested that the craft was to begin powered tests at three-week intervals. In September 2017, CEO George Whitesides suggested that engine testing was complete, and that only a "small number of glide flights" remained before VSS Unity would begin powered test flights. The first powered flight test took place on 5 April 2018 when a 30-second rocket firing accelerated Unity to a speed of Mach 1.87 and an altitude of. The first powered test flight of Unity exceeded the altitude of all powered test flights of its predecessor, Enterprise.
VSS Unity VP-03, the first suborbital spaceflight of VSS Unity was successfully completed on 13 December 2018, surpassing the altitude considered the boundary of outer space by NASA and the United States Air Force.
Following its February, 2019 flight to space, VSS Unity began to undergo modifications including installation of the commercial cabin, and changes to cockpit displays.
List of test flights
LegendCode | Detail |
GFxx | Glide Flight |
CCxx | Captive Carry Flight |
CFxx | Cold Flow Flight |
PFxx | Powered Flight |
Fxx | Feathering deployed |
Flight designation | Date | Duration | Maximum altitude | Top speed | Pilot / co-pilot | Notes |
01 / CC01 | 8 September 2016 | 15.2 km | Stucky / Mackay | |||
02 / CC02 | 1 November 2016 | Strong winds, no release during flight intended as GF01 | ||||
03 / CC03 | 3 November 2016 | Strong winds, no release during second attempt at GF01 | ||||
04 / CC04 | 30 November 2016 | Test of minor modifications | ||||
05 / GF01 | 3 December 2016 | 10 minutes | 16.8km | Mach 0.6 | Stucky / Mackay | First Glide Flight |
06 / GF02 | 22 December 2016 | Stucky / Mackay | ||||
07 / GF03 | 24 February 2017 | Sturckow / Mackay | 3rd Glide Flight | |||
08 / GF04 | 1 May 2017 | Stucky / Masucci | F01 | |||
09 / CF01 | 1 June 2017 | Mackay / Sturckow | ||||
10 / GF06 | 4 August 2017 | Mackay / Sturckow | First flight with major propulsion components aboard. | |||
11 / GF07 | 11 January 2018 | Mach 0.9 | Stucky / Masucci | |||
12 / PF01 | 5 April 2018 | 25.7 km | Mach 1.87 | Stucky / Mackay | F02 | |
13 / PF02 | 29 May 2018 | 34.9 km | Mach 1.9 | Mackay / Stucky | Test of changed center of gravity as passenger seats carried for first time. F03 | |
14 / PF03 | 26 July 2018 | 52 km | Mach 2.47 | Mackay / Masucci | Reached Mesosphere for first time. | |
15 / VP-03 | 13 December 2018 | 82.7 km | Mach 2.9 | Stucky / Sturckow | Reached outer space for first time according to the US definition of the space border. | |
16 / VF-01 | 22 February 2019 | 89.9 km | Mach 3.04 | Mackay / Masucci / Moses | Carried third crew member for the first time | |
17 / GF08 | 1 May 2020 | 15.24 km | Mach 0.7 | Mackay / Sturckow | First flight from New Mexico | |
18 / GF09 | 25 June 2020 | 15.54 km | Mach 0.85 | Stucky / Masucci |