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What’s next for space tourism? Everything you need to know about current projects

Winged vehicles, vertical rockets and high-altitude balloons, we look at the out-of-this-world plans under development

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An artist’s impression of the World View sub-orbital capsule and balloon. Photo: World View via AP
Associated Press
Virgin Galactic later this month in Mojave, California, is preparing to roll out its new SpaceShipTwo, a vehicle the company hopes will one day take tourists to the edge of space. It comes roughly 15½ months after an earlier incarnation was destroyed in a test flight, killing one of the pilots. Despite the setback, the dream of sending tourists to space is still alive.
Virgin Galactic's first SpaceShipTwo, an air-launched suborbital spaceplane type designed for space tourism. Photo: Virgin Galactic via AP
Virgin Galactic's first SpaceShipTwo, an air-launched suborbital spaceplane type designed for space tourism. Photo: Virgin Galactic via AP

VIRGIN GALACTIC

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The most prominent space tourism programme, the commercial space line founded by adventurer-business mogul Richard Branson will use a winged rocket plane dubbed SpaceShipTwo, successor to SpaceShipOne, which in 2004 won the US$10 million Ansari X Prize that was intended to spur the industry’s development.

SpaceShipTwo is designed to be flown by two pilots and carry up to six passengers on a suborbital trajectory to altitudes above 100 kilometres, the internationally recognised boundary of space.

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Like early X-planes, Virgin Galactic’s craft will be carried aloft by another aircraft, called WhiteKnightTwo, and released at about 15,000 metres before its rocket engine is ignited for a supersonic ride to the fringes of space and a view of the Earth below.

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