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What is the News?
Virgin Group founder Richard Branson and five others undertook a trip to the “edge of space”, and reached an altitude of 85 km from Earth before returning. Such a trip is called a Suborbital Flight.
What is Suborbital Flight?
- Suborbital Flights occur when a spacecraft reaches space, but its velocity is such that it cannot orbit the Earth once they reach there.
How does Suborbital Flight work?
- When an object travels at a horizontal speed of about 28,000 km/hr or more, it goes into orbit. Satellites need to reach that threshold speed in order to orbit Earth.
- Such a satellite would be accelerating towards the Earth due to gravity, but its horizontal movement is fast enough to offset the downward motion so that it moves along a circular path.
- This is because any object traveling slower than 28,000 km/hr must eventually return to Earth.
- However, Unity spacecraft traveled far enough to reach the “edge of space”. These are suborbital flights because they will not be traveling fast enough to orbit Earth once they reach there.
- Such a trip allows space travelers to experience a few minutes of “weightlessness”.
Analogy of Suborbital Flight:
- For an analogy, consider a cricket ball thrown into the air. Given that no human hand can give it a speed of 28,000 km/hr (about 8 m/sec), the ball will fly in an arc until its entire kinetic energy is swapped with potential energy.
- At that instant, it will lose its vertical motion momentarily, before returning to Earth under the influence of gravity.
- A suborbital flight is like this cricket ball, but traveling fast enough to reach the “edge of space” and yet without enough horizontal velocity to go into orbit.
- If an object travels as fast as 40,000 km/hr, it will achieve escape velocity and never return to Earth.
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