Virgin’s founder, Sir Richard Branson, in Sydney, Australia.
James D. Morgan | Getty Images
Virgin Galactic announced on Thursday that the space tourism company will attempt to launch its next test spaceflight on July 11, carrying founder Sir Richard Branson.
Branson is aiming to beat fellow billionaire Jeff Bezos to space, as the latter plans to launch with his own company, Blue Origin, on July 20.
“After more than 16 years of research, engineering, and testing, Virgin Galactic stands at the vanguard of a new commercial space industry, which is set to open space to humankind and change the world for good,” Branson said in a statement. “I’m honoured to help validate the journey our future astronauts will undertake and ensure we deliver the unique customer experience people expect from Virgin.”
This will be Virgin Galactic’s fourth test spaceflight to date and its first mission with a crew of four on board, as the company launched its most recent spaceflight with just two pilots on May 22.
Shares of Virgin Galactic popped more than 20% during after-hours trading, up from Thursday’s close of $43.19.
Alongside Branson will be three Virgin Galactic mission specialists: Chief astronaut instructor Beth Moses, lead operations engineer Colin Bennett, and government affairs VP Sirisha Bandla. Virgin Galactic pilots Dave Mackay and Michael Masucci will fly the company’s VSS Unity spacecraft.
Virgin Galactic says it will livestream the spaceflight for the first time, a feed that will be available on Twitter, YouTube, and Facebook.
On June 25 the company announced that the Federal Aviation Administration granted a license to fly passengers on future spaceflights and Virgin is targeting early 2022 to begin flying paying passengers.
Branson founded Virgin Galactic in 2004 to build a space tourism business. The company’s spacecraft launch from a carrier aircraft, before accelerating to more than three times the speed of sound.
Virgin Galactic’s spacecraft then spends a few minutes in microgravity above 80 kilometers altitude – the boundary the U.S. officially recognizes as space – before slowly flipping around and gliding back to Earth to land on a runway.
Virgin Galactic competes only with Bezos’ Blue Origin in the realm of suborbital space tourism, as Elon Musk’s SpaceX carries passengers on longer trips into orbit, such as to the International Space Station.
In June, Bezos announced that he would fly on Blue Origin’s first passenger flight of its New Shepard rocket. Bezos is scheduled to launch on July 20, and will fly alongside his brother, the winner of a $28 million public auction and legendary aerospace pioneer Wally Funk.