'' cover of November 1931, showing a proposed sub-orbital spaceship that would reach an altitude on its one-hour trip from Berlin to New York. While there are a great many possible sub-orbital flight profiles, it is expected that some will be more common than others.
mothership, lifted itself to approximately 100 km, and then glided to the ground.
Ballistic missiles The first sub-orbital vehicles which reached space were
ballistic missiles. The first ballistic missile to reach space was the German
V-2, the work of the scientists at
Peenemünde, on October 3, 1942, which reached an altitude of . Then in the late 1940s the US and
USSR concurrently developed missiles all of which were based on the V-2 Rocket, and then much longer range Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (ICBMs). There are now many countries who possess ICBMs and even more with shorter range
Intermediate Range Ballistic Missiles (IRBMs).
Tourist flights Sub-orbital tourist flights will initially focus on attaining the altitude required to qualify as reaching space. The flight path will be either vertical or very steep, with the spacecraft landing back at its take-off site. The spacecraft will shut off its
engines well before reaching maximum altitude, and then coast up to its highest point. During a few minutes, from the point when the engines are shut off to the point where the atmosphere begins to slow down the downward acceleration, the passengers will experience
weightlessness.
Megaroc had been planned for sub-orbital spaceflight by the
British Interplanetary Society in the 1940s. In late 1945, a group led by M. Tikhonravov K. and N. G. Chernysheva at the Soviet NII-4 academy (dedicated to rocket artillery science and technology), began work on a stratospheric rocket project,
VR-190, aimed at vertical flight by a crew of two pilots, to an altitude of 200 km (65,000 ft) using captured
V-2. In 2004, a number of companies worked on vehicles in this class as entrants to the Ansari X Prize competition. The
Scaled Composites SpaceShipOne was officially declared by
Rick Searfoss to have won the competition on October 4, 2004, after completing two flights within a two-week period. In 2005,
Sir Richard Branson of the
Virgin Group announced the creation of
Virgin Galactic and his plans for a 9-seat capacity SpaceShipTwo named
VSS Enterprise. It has since been completed with eight seats (one pilot, one co-pilot and six passengers) and has taken part in captive-carry tests and with the first mother-ship
WhiteKnightTwo, or
VMS Eve. It has also completed solitary glides, with the movable tail sections in both fixed and "feathered" configurations. The
hybrid rocket motor has been fired multiple times in ground-based test stands, and was fired in a powered flight for the second time on 5 September 2013. Four additional SpaceShipTwos have been ordered and will operate from the new
Spaceport America. Commercial flights carrying passengers were expected in 2014, but became cancelled due to the
disaster during SS2 PF04 flight. Branson stated, "[w]e are going to learn from what went wrong, discover how we can improve safety and performance and then move forwards together."
Scientific experiments A major use of sub-orbital vehicles today is as
scientific sounding rockets. Scientific sub-orbital flights began in the 1920s when
Robert H. Goddard launched the first
liquid fueled rockets, however they did not reach
space altitude. In the late 1940s, captured German
V-2 ballistic missiles were converted into
V-2 sounding rockets which helped lay the foundation for modern sounding rockets. Today there are dozens of different sounding rockets on the market, from a variety of suppliers in various countries. Typically, researchers wish to conduct experiments in
microgravity or above the atmosphere.
Sub-orbital transportation Research, such as that done for the
X-20 Dyna-Soar project suggests that a semi-ballistic sub-orbital flight could travel from Europe to North America in less than an hour. However, the size of rocket, relative to the payload, necessary to achieve this, is similar to an ICBM. ICBMs have delta-v's somewhat less than orbital; and therefore would be somewhat cheaper than the costs for reaching orbit, but the difference is not large. Due to the high cost of spaceflight, suborbital flights are likely to be initially limited to high value, very high urgency cargo deliveries such as
courier flights,
military fast-response operations or
space tourism. The
SpaceLiner is a hypersonic
suborbital spaceplane concept that could transport 50 passengers from
Australia to
Europe in 90 minutes or 100 passengers from Europe to
California in 60 minutes. The main challenge lies in increasing the reliability of the different components, particularly the engines, in order to make their use for passenger transportation on a daily basis possible.
SpaceX is potentially considering using their
Starship as a sub-orbital point-to-point transportation system. ==Notable uncrewed sub-orbital spaceflights==