Galactic 05

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Galactic 05
Mission typeCrewed sub-orbital spaceflight
OperatorVirgin Galactic
Apogee87.2 km (54.2 mi)
Spacecraft properties
SpacecraftVSS Unity
Spacecraft typeSpaceShipTwo
ManufacturerThe Spaceship Company
Crew
Crew size6
MembersMichael Masucci
Kelly Latimer
Colin Bennett
Alan Stern
Kellie Gerardi
Ketty Maisonrouge
Start of mission
Launch date2 November 2023, 15:00 UTC
Launch siteSpaceport America Runway 34
Deployed fromVMS Eve
End of mission
Landing date2 November 2023, 15:59 UTC
Landing siteSpaceport America Runway 34

Galactic 05 mission patch

Galactic 05 was a crewed sub-orbital spaceflight of the SpaceShipTwo-class VSS Unity, which launched on 2 November 2023. It was the fifth commercial spaceflight and tenth overall spaceflight for American aerospace company Virgin Galactic.[1]

Crew

Galactic 05's crew included three private passengers and three Virgin Galactic employees.

Position Crew
Commander United States Michael Masucci
Sixth spaceflight
Pilot United States Kelly Latimer
Third spaceflight
Astronaut instructor United Kingdom Colin Bennett
Third spaceflight
Researcher United States Alan Stern
First spaceflight
Researcher United StatesKellie Gerardi
First spaceflight
Tourist Italy Ketty Maisonrouge
First spaceflight

Stern performed studies of human body's reaction to zero-gravity by wearing a biomedical monitoring harness. He also wanted to develop in-space operation of a particular high-tech camera that is planned to be used on an astronomical research mission in the future by NASA. His flight and research were financed by Southwest Research Institute.[2]

Gerardi flew the Galactic 05 mission as a payload specialist doing scientific research with Alan Stern, a private passenger also on board. Onboard, Gerardi operated three biomedical and thermodynamic fluid experiments on behalf of IIAS (International Institute for Astronautical Sciences, a private international education and research facility). Gerardi operated a fluid cell designed to help better predict and control the shape and location of fluid within a container in microgravity. She also wore the Astroskin biomonitoring device to collect a wide range of biometric data during her flight. A third experiment studied insulin-resistance during spaceflight, and Gerardi wore a Continuous Glucose Monitor (CGM) to measure and store glucose readings. Her flight was paid for by IIAS and the research done was developed by National Research Council of Canada.[2][3]

References

  1. ^ Virgin Galactic (2 November 2023). "VIRGIN GALACTIC COMPLETES SIXTH SUCCESSFUL SPACEFLIGHT IN SIX MONTHS". Virgin Galactic. Retrieved 2 November 2023.
  2. ^ a b Harwood, William (2 November 2023). "Virgin Galactic launches fifth commercial flight to sub-orbital space and back". CBS News. Retrieved 27 November 2023.
  3. ^ Etherington, Darrell (3 June 2021). "Virgin Galactic to fly Kellie Gerardi to space on a dedicated research mission". TechCrunch. Retrieved 2 June 2024.

See also