• TechMediaNetwork
  • LiveScience
  • SPACE.com
  • Newsarama
  • TopTenREVIEWS
advertisement


WhiteKnightTwo during a low-level flyover June 20, 2009 at the Las Cruces International Airport in New Mexico. Credit: Barb Sprungman


WhiteKnightTwo during one of three flyovers June 20, 2009 at the Las Cruces International Airport in New Mexico. Credit: Barb Sprungman


An artist's concept of Spaceport America, a suborbital spaceport under construction in New Mexico. Credit: Spaceport America Conceptual Images URS/Foster + Partners

A 'Flying Launch Pad' Cruises New Mexico Skies
By Leonard David
SPACE.com’s Space Insider Columnist
posted: 20 June 2009
01:48 pm ET

Untitled Document

LAS CRUCES, New Mexico – The flying launch pad, WhiteKnightTwo, made three low level flyovers here today at the Las Cruces International Airport – a continuation of celebrations for the groundbreaking of nearby Spaceport America.

WhiteKnightTwo is undergoing an extensive program of test flights, including long duration jaunts from its California home base at Mojave Air and Space Port.
The exotic looking aircraft – seemingly a catamaran of the sky – was en route to the June 19 groundbreaking ceremonies at Spaceport America. A slight technical difficulty curtailed that plan, with the mega-craft landing in Phoenix.

Today, lifting off from Phoenix, WhiteKnightTwo then winged its way here, cruising overhead in near cloudless skies. For onlookers gathered on the tarmac at the Las Cruces International Airport – including this reporter – the low level, over the runway flybys were indeed impressive.

The huge mothership of a craft is undergoing an ever-expanding list of test objectives. WhiteKnightTwo is the launch system for the six passenger/two pilot SpaceShipTwo suborbital rocket plane, an effort backed by Sir Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic spaceliner company.

According to Virgin Galactic officials here, expect to see the unveiling of SpaceShipTwo this coming December. That rocketship, like WhiteKnightTwo, is a product of a skilled workforce at Scaled Composites, headquartered at the Mojave Air and Space Port.

Leonard David has been reporting on the space industry for more than four decades. He is past editor-in-chief of the National Space Society's Ad Astra and Space World magazines and has written for SPACE.com since 1999.

 

Orion UltraView 8x42 Wide-Angle Binocular
$149.95
Explore More


















Site Map | News | SpaceFlight | Science | Technology | Entertainment | SpaceViews | NightSky | Ad Astra | SETI | Hot Topics
Image Galleries | Videos | Reader Favorites | Image of the Day | Amazing Images | Wallpapers | Games | Community | Reviews
about us | FREE Email Newsletter | message boards | register at SPACE.com | contact us | advertise with us | terms & conditions | privacy statement
DMCA/Copyright
  What is This?
<