Skip to main content

Virgin Galactic plans to use a souped-up 747 to launch satellites into orbit on the cheap

What to do when your 747s are beginning to age and you need to get the last bit of use out of them? Simple: turn them into satellite launchers. Virgin Galactic says that it has repurposed an 2001 747-400 named “Cosmic Girl” to serve as a dedicated launch platform for its LauncherOne small satellite launch service.

Cosmic Girl will be retrofitted with an attachment on its left wing, close to where the fifth engine is found on some other 747-400s. The LauncherOne rocket would mount to the attachment, and be launched mid-flight at around 35,000 feet. The process stands to save Virgin Galactic a good deal in launch costs given the rocket has less air resistance to get into orbit, which means far lower gas costs.

Recommended Videos

“Air launch enables us to provide rapid, responsive service to our satellite customers on a schedule set by their business and operational needs, rather than the constraints of national launch ranges,” Virgin Galactic CEO George Whitesides said in a statement.

Virgin already has a use for its new mid-air rocket launcher: the LauncherOne service will be used to launch nearly 2,400 satellites as part of a partnership with Qualcomm. A company called OneWeb will maintain these satellites when they launch in 2018, aimed at providing Internet access to underserved areas. Another multi-million dollar contract was signed with NASA to launch about a dozen experimental satellites during test flights for LauncherOne.

Virgin says that the service could allow it to launch satellites for customers in as little as 24 hours notice, versus the current six month plus waiting period companies need to plan for with standard rocket launches. LauncherOne can also handle more heavier payloads thanks to recent upgrades: the rockets now have a maximum payload of up to 400 kilograms, aimed at making the service feasible for a wider array of clients, especially lucrative government contracts.

Test flights for the rocket launcher-equipped 747 are expected to start in 2017.

Ed Oswald
For fifteen years, Ed has written about the latest and greatest in gadgets and technology trends. At Digital Trends, he's…
Virgin Galactic to launch first crewed test flight from New Mexico this month
virgin galactic takes big step toward space tourism trips vss unity

Virgin Galactic is coming one step closer to its goal of bringing paying tourists to the very edge of space, with the company announcing it will perform its first crewed test flight from Spaceport America later this month.

The spacecraft VSS Unity, a SpaceShipTwo model, will take off from Spaceport America in New Mexico, from where customers will launch to the edge of space. The company has previously performed a number of test flights from Mojave Air and Space Port in California, but now it will perform another test with crew aboard from New Mexico.

Read more
See the majestic Southern Pinwheel Galaxy in this Dark Energy Camera image
Twelve million light-years away lies the galactic masterpiece Messier 83, also known as the Southern Pinwheel Galaxy. Its swirling spiral arms display a high rate of star formation and host six detected supernovae. This image was captured with the Department of Energy-fabricated Dark Energy Camera, mounted on the U.S. National Science Foundation Víctor M. Blanco 4-meter Telescope at Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory in Chile, a Program of NSF NOIRLab.

An image from the Dark Energy Camera (DECam) shows a striking celestial sight: the Southern Pinwheel Galaxy, a gorgeous face-on galaxy that is one of the closest and brightest barred spiral galaxies in the sky. Also known as Messier 83, the galaxy is bright enough that it can even be seen with binoculars, but this image from a 4-meter Víctor M. Blanco Telescope shows the kind of stunning detail that can be picked out using a powerful instrument.

"This image shows Messier 83’s well-defined spiral arms, filled with pink clouds of hydrogen gas where new stars are forming," explains NOIRLab from the National Science Foundation, which released the image. "Interspersed amongst these pink regions are bright blue clusters of hot, young stars whose ultraviolet radiation has blown away the surrounding gas. At the galaxy’s core, a yellow central bulge is composed of older stars, and a weak bar connects the spiral arms through the center, funneling gas from the outer regions toward the core. DECam’s high sensitivity captures Messier 83’s extended halo, and myriad more distant galaxies in the background."

Read more
Watch SpaceX fire up Starship spacecraft engines ahead of 7th test flight
SpaceX performing a static fire test of its Starship rocket in December 2024.

SpaceX has shared a video (below) showing a static fire test of its Starship spacecraft at the spaceflight company’s Starbase site near Boca Chica, Texas.

https://x.com/SpaceX/status/1868436135468552361

Read more