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    Home » Sections » Science » Britain’s groundbreaking satellite launch ends in failure

    Britain’s groundbreaking satellite launch ends in failure

    Britain's attempt to become the first European nation to launch satellites into space ended in bitter disappointment early on Tuesday.
    By Agency Staff10 January 2023
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    Technicians work on Virgin Orbit’s LauncherOne rocket, attached to the wing of Cosmic Girl, a Boeing 747-400 aircraft, ahead of UK’s First launch, at Spaceport Cornwall at Newquay Airport in Newquay, UK. Henry Nicholls/Reuters

    Britain’s attempt to become the first European nation to launch satellites into space ended in bitter disappointment early on Tuesday when Virgin Orbit said its rocket had suffered an anomaly that prevented it from reaching orbit.

    The “horizontal launch” mission had left from the coastal town of Newquay in southwest England, with Virgin’s LauncherOne rocket carried under the wing of a modified Boeing 747 called “Cosmic Girl”, and later released over the Atlantic Ocean.

    “We appear to have an anomaly that has prevented us from reaching orbit,” the company said. “We are evaluating the information.”

    We appear to have an anomaly that has prevented us from reaching orbit. We are evaluating the information

    The failure deals a further blow to European space ambitions after an Italian-built Vega-C rocket mission failed after liftoff from French Guiana in late December.

    The rockets have since been grounded.

    Europe has suffered a series of setbacks in the past year, with its key Ariane 6 launcher delayed, access to Russian Soyuz rockets blocked by the Ukraine war, Vega grounded and now a showcase launch for the burgeoning small launcher industry abandoned.

    Virgin Orbit had initially said on Twitter that LauncherOne had reached Earth orbit, a tweet it later deleted.

    “Over the coming days there will be an investigation by the government and various bodies, including Virgin Orbit,” Matt Archer, commercial space director at the UK Space Agency said.

    Virgin Orbit, part-owned by British billionaire Richard Branson, had planned to deploy nine small satellites into low-Earth orbit in its first mission outside its US base.

    Quickly dispersed

    The mission had been heralded as an historic first for Cornwall, Britain and Europe, and thousands of enthusiasts watching from beside the runway cheered when “Cosmic Girl” took off and when they were told the rocket had been deployed.

    The crowd quickly and quietly dispersed following the announcement of failure.

    A mission failure would be the second in Virgin Orbit’s history since its first launch in 2020. The company has had four successful missions.

    Archer, at the UK Space Agency, said the a first stage burn had taken the rocket into space but the second stage had a “technical anomaly and didn’t reach the required orbit”.

    A graphic display on an official video feed showed the mission at second-engine cut-off, three steps short of payload deployment about two hours after take-off.

    The war in Ukraine has highlighted the importance for tactical military purposes of smaller satellites, like those being launched from Newquay, which can get into low orbit at much shorter notice than bigger ones.

    A replica model of Virgin Orbit’s LauncherOne rocket sits in a media area ahead of UK’s First launch at Newquay Airport. Henry Nicholls/Reuters

    It was not immediately clear how the failure, which will have to be investigated, would affect the timing or location of future missions. Virgin Orbit CEO Dan Hart told reporters on Sunday that the company hoped to return to Newquay before the end of 2023.

    Britain says it is the leading non-US manufacturer of satellites, with 47 000 people employed in its space industry, and has called for the development of multiple potential microlaunch sites including two vertical launchpads in Scotland.

    The UK Space Agency had described the Cornish mission as a moment of national pride for Britain’s growing space industry while Britain’s minister for science, George Freeman, said it was an “historic moment”.

    “Lots and lots of things have been achieved and yet the milestone is obviously disappointing,” Archer said. “But we will continue to press on and we will get there in the end.”  — Paul Sandle, with Tim Hepher and Joey Roulette, (c) 2023 Reuters

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