Hosted by Dailymotion. For legal issues report at the Copyright Center, report us on DMC, or use the Instant Removal tool.
Virgin Galactic Unity's Final Mission - Galactic 07
Description
This was Virgin Galactic's VSS Unity's last flight.
Six passengers and crew flew to an altitude of 54.4 miles (87.5 km).
Galactic O7 Space Tourists:
Anand "Andy" Harish Sadhwani of California
Irving Izchak Pergament of New York
Giorgi Manenti of Italy
Also aboard Galactic O7:
Turkish astronaut Tuva Atasever
VSS Unity commander Nicola Pecile
Pilot Jameel Janjua
Credit: Space.com | footage courtesy: Virgin Galactic | edited by Steve Spaleta
Six passengers and crew flew to an altitude of 54.4 miles (87.5 km).
Galactic O7 Space Tourists:
Anand "Andy" Harish Sadhwani of California
Irving Izchak Pergament of New York
Giorgi Manenti of Italy
Also aboard Galactic O7:
Turkish astronaut Tuva Atasever
VSS Unity commander Nicola Pecile
Pilot Jameel Janjua
Credit: Space.com | footage courtesy: Virgin Galactic | edited by Steve Spaleta
More from User
03:38
Amazing Views Of Robotic Arm Inspecting Chinese Space Station
Space.com
00:55
OTD in Space – June 18: America’s First Woman in Space
Space.com
01:18
Watch James Webb Space Telescopes Amazing View Of A Dwarf Galaxies Stars
Space.com
01:02
Watch How NASA Sends Communicates With Voyager 2
Space.com
08:01
Time-Lapse Of SpaceX's Crew-6 Dragon Approaching Space Station
Space.com
04:19
Massive Iceberg Breaks Off Antarctic Brunt Ice Shelf - View From Space
Space.com
Related Videos
10:16
Virgin Galactic - Suborbital Spaceflights Next To Space Tourists
BigBlue
17:01
Virgin Galactic Unity Soared To Suborbital Space With Commercial Passengers
Space.com
17:01
Virgin Galactic Unity Soared To Suborbital Space With Commercial Passengers
Space.com
17:01
Virgin Galactic Unity Soared To Suborbital Space With Commercial Passengers
Space.com
01:58
Virgin Galactic Unity Soars To Suborbital Space With Original Customers - Watch Highlights
Space.com
17:01
Virgin Galactic Unity Soars To Suborbital Space With Commercial Passengers For 2nd Time
Space.com