The US Roc, the world's largest aircraft by wingspan, successfully carried an experimental hypersonic vehicle equipped with a Talon-A engine under its fuselage.
The Roc aircraft flies with the TA-1 hypersonic test vehicle on December 3 in California. Photo: Stratolaunch
The world’s largest aircraft took off last weekend with a new payload under its massive wingspan. Stratolaunch’s Roc carrier aircraft conducted its first flight carrying another vehicle on December 3, according to Space . The main goal was to evaluate the propulsion system of Stratolaunch’s first experimental autonomous hypersonic vehicle, called Talon-A, or TA-1, and see how it would react during transport.
"The Talon-A propulsion system supports the liquid-fueled rocket engine, providing the thrust needed to reach hypersonic speeds," said Zachary Krevor, CEO of Stratolaunch. "While we have conducted several successful ground tests to fuel and fire the system, we need to evaluate how the system performs in the air before separating. Initial flight results show the system performed as predicted, and we will determine next steps after reviewing the full test data."
The TA-1 test hypersonic vehicle in close-up. Photo: Stratolaunch
The latest flight was the 12th for the Roc, which has a 117-meter wingspan. The massive twin-body aircraft flew earlier in May this year, performing its first drop test with a Talon prototype. The Roc was airborne for 3 hours and 22 minutes on December 3, after taking off from Mojave Air and Space Port in Southern California. The TA-1 was attached to the bottom of the transport aircraft from takeoff to landing.
Stratolaunch was founded by Microsoft co-founder Paul Allen in 2011. The original goal was to launch rockets from high altitudes into the Earth's atmosphere, similar to Virgin Galactic's passenger-carrying WhiteKnightTwo and VSS Unity. But in 2019, a year after Allen's death, the company focused on using Roc as a platform for hypersonic vehicle research and development. The reusable Talon-A will be Stratolaunch's first hypersonic vehicle.
An Khang (According to Space )
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