Winner of the $10m Ansari X-Prize , this suborbital passenger-carrying spaceplane was designed by
Burt Rutan 's Scaled Composites , famous for graphite composites, and also the integrating contractor for the former
Roton . Following their successful bid to win the X-Prize , Scaled Composites
are now turning their eyes to the next step: the development of a
commecially viable passenger-carrying suborbital space vehicle.
SpaceShipOne
features a rubber-nitrous oxide hybrid rocket engine and cold gas
attitude control thrusters; a graphite/epoxy primary structure; 3-place,
sea-level, shirt-sleeve cabin environment; a low maintenance thermal
protection system; and a unique feathered reentry system.
The spaceplane is carried under the belly of Scaled Composites ' White Knight carrier aircraft. The White Knight is a piloted, twin-turbojet research aircraft derived from the Proteus intended for high-altitude missions. Its first flight was on August 1, 2002. It provides a high-altitude airborne launch of SpaceShipOne . The White Knight is also equipped to flight-qualify all the SpaceShipOne
systems, except rocket propulsion. The aircraft's cockpit, avionics,
life support systems, pneumatics, trim servos, data system, and
electrical system components are identical to those installed in SpaceShipOne .
The White Knight drops SpaceShipOne at 50,000 ft. SpaceShipOne
then climbs nearly vertically under power at a 3-4g acceleration. The
hybrid engine burns out at Mach 3.5, 65 seconds after ignition. The
spaceplane coasts to approximately 100 km. (328,000 ft.) before
free-falling back to earth. Pilot and passengers experience microgravity
above the atmosphere for 3.5 minutes.
Before reentry, the pilot raises SpaceShipOne 's
twin tails to vertical. This feathering approach stabilizes the
spaceplane without need of pilot input. Reentry deceleration is up to
5gs. After reentry, the pilot returns the twin tails to horizontal, and SpaceShipOne glides to a runway landing.
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