Skip to main content

Virgin Galactic has just unveiled a very shiny space plane

Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShip III, VSS Imagine. Virgin Galactic

Virgin Galactic has unveiled its latest suborbital aircraft that will one day take high-paying tourists on trips to the edge of space.

The company unveiled SpaceShip III, also known as VSS Imagine, in a short video presentation (below) on Tuesday, March 30.

Recommended Videos

Imagine, will take you there.

Introducing the first #SpaceShipIII in the #VirginGalactic fleet. pic.twitter.com/BW6qA5oDfR

— Virgin Galactic (@virgingalactic) March 30, 2021

The exterior of Virgin Galactic’s new aircraft features a mirror-like material that besides looking pretty darn incredible, also provides a degree of thermal protection.

The company couldn’t resist weaving the shiny look into its launch blurb, pointing out how it “reflects our inherent human fascination with space and the transformative experience of spaceflight.”

Beyond that, there aren’t many details about the new aircraft, except that it features a modular design that will pave the way for easier maintenance and more flights, with the company targeting as many as 400 suborbital trips a year per aircraft.

VSS Imagine will soon begin ground testing, with glide flights planned for this summer from Virgin Galactic’s Spaceport America base in New Mexico. In the coming months, the company will also start building VSS Inspire, the second SpaceShip III vehicle within the Virgin Galactic fleet.

Tourism flights

Virgin Galactic is aiming to launch tourism flights to the edge of space, competing with the likes of SpaceX and Blue Origin.

But at a reported $250,000 per seat, the flights won’t come cheap. Those who do fork out for the once-in-a-lifetime experience will begin their trip inside VSS Imagine, which itself will be carried part of the way up by a larger aircraft. When it reaches around 50,000 feet, Imagine will blast away from the carrier aircraft to fly to an altitude of around 62 miles — the generally agreed boundary of space — with stunning views and a brief period of weightlessness all part of the package. It will then return to Earth and land on a runway like a conventional aircraft.

“VSS Imagine and Inspire are stunning ships that will take our future astronauts on an incredible voyage to space, and their names reflect the aspirational nature of human spaceflight,” Michael Colglazier, CEO of Virgin Galactic, said in a release.

Virgin founder Richard Branson commented: “Virgin Galactic spaceships are built specifically to deliver a new, transforming perspective to the thousands of people who will soon be able to experience the wonder of space for themselves.”

He added: “As a SpaceShip III class of vehicle, Imagine is not just beautiful to look at, but represents Virgin Galactic’s growing fleet of spaceships. All great achievements, creations, and changes start with an idea. Our hope is for all those who travel to space to return with fresh perspectives and new ideas that will bring positive change to our planet.”

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Virgin Galactic sets date for first fully crewed rocket trip since 2021
virgin galactic sets date for final test of rocket plane vss unity flight

Space tourism company Virgin Galactic is just days away from what should be its final fully crewed test flight before a commercial launch this summer.

The team has announced that it’s currently targeting Thursday, May 25, for a mission that will see four crewmembers blasted to the edge of space aboard the rocket-powered VSS Unity plane.

Read more
Virgin Galactic announces first fully crewed flight since 2021
Virgin Galactic's space plane heading to the edge of space.

Space tourism company Virgin Galactic has announced plans for another test flight ahead of its first commercial mission this summer.

The test flight using its rocket-powered space plane will take place in “late May” and will be the company’s second fully crewed trip since Virgin founder Richard Branson and others tested the hardware in a successful flight in July 2021.

Read more
Four space station astronauts just took Crew Dragon ‘for a spin’
SpaceX's Crew Dragon Endeavour spacecraft.

Four crewmembers at the International Space Station (ISS) enjoyed a short ride aboard SpaceX’s Crew Dragon Endeavour on Saturday, moving the spacecraft to a different port to make way for a cargo ship arriving in June.

SpaceX Crew-6 members Stephen Bowen and Woody Hoburg of NASA, along with Sultan Alneyadi of the United Arab Emirates and Andrey Fedyaev of Russia, undocked from the Harmony module’s space-facing port at 7:23 a.m. before flying the short distance to the same module’s forward port.

Read more