VSS Unity
Part of the SpaceShipTwo-class fleet, the VSS (Virgin Space Ship) Unity is a suborbital, rocket-engine-powered spaceplane capable of short trips to 80 km.
Stats
Crew: 2
Passengers: 6 passengers
Length: 18.3 m (60 ft 0 in)
Wingspan: 8.3 m (27 ft 3 in)
Height: 5.5 m (18 ft 1 in)
Maximum speed: 4,000 km/h (2,500 mph, 2,200 kn)
Virgin Galactic’s suborbital craft is piloted and drop-launches from underneath a specially designed and built, one-of-a-kind, aircraft called White Knight Two.
Unity is designed primarily to serve Virgin Galactic’s space tourism market, where people will pay for a seat on a future suborbital mission. It carries a crew of 4 and reaches a maximum speed of 2.6K MPH during its 90 min flight.
During testing and purposefully tailored missions, the VSS Unity can also fly scientific experiments for universities, research institutions, and national space agencies.
The second ship of the SpaceShipTwo-class fleet, Unity was named by Dr. Stephen Hawking, whose eye is the model for the logo on the side of the craft.
Construction began in 2012, with the first captive flight (held by White Knight Two) on September 8th, 2016, a first free-flight (no rocket engine ignited) flight on December 3rd, 2016, and a first suborbital flight, reaching the 80 km boundary where the United States says space begins, on December 13th, 2018.
That first suborbital flight became the first human space launch (U.S. definition of space; a majority of the world considers 100 km to be the start of space) from the United States since the retirement of the Space Shuttle fleet in July 2011.
Image: Virgin Galactic