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OP-ED: More than a joyride?

ঢাকা ট্রিবিউন গ্যারেথ ডরিয়ান প্রকাশিত: ১৮ জুলাই ২০২১, ০৭:০৩

The flights of Bezos and Branson hardly count as going to space
Billionaire entrepreneur Richard Branson and his team successfully flew to the “edge of space” on the Unity 22 mission aboard a Virgin Galactic plane on July 12. The event was hailed as the start of space tourism, narrowly beating the planned launch on July 20 by fellow billionaire business magnate Jeff Bezos and his firm Blue Origin.


But does the 85km (53 miles), the altitude of the recent Virgin Galactic flight, actually count as space? And what are these companies likely to achieve going forward?


The definition of where space begins is very subjective. The Karman line is a distance of 100km, determined in 1957. This line has been adopted by the Swiss Air Sports Federation to determine if an activity is aeronautical or astronautical.


Alternatively, the US Air Force and Nasa determine their boundary as 80km, which is where military personnel get their “astronaut wings,” This altitude has been reached by a number of specialist planes including the X-15 and notably the privately funded SpaceShipOne, reaching 112km -- well above VSS Unity’s current achievement. The Blue Origin launch is aiming for 106km.

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