Virgin Galactic has postponed a test flight of its SpaceShipTwo space plane. The test was originally scheduled to take place Wednesday above California's Mojave Desert, but the space tourism company said in a morning tweet that "the Mojave weather isn't cooperating."

The company plans to try again in the next few days, according to the tweet.

The test will be the fifth powered flight of the space plane and the first since a Dec. 13 test that saw the VSS Unity craft rise to 271,268 feet (51.4 miles, or 82.7 kilometers). That's just shy of the Karman line, an imaginary boundary 100 kilometers above average sea level that is often considered the beginning of space.

VSS Unity will fire its motor after being carried aloft and released by a carrier plane, WhiteKnightTwo, which will take off from the Mojave Air and Space Port in Mojave, California.

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Virgin Galactic has given few details about the test but said it should yield more information about the craft's center of gravity — which is of critical importance to a vehicle's handling characteristics.

SpaceShipTwo was mated to our mothership WhiteKnightTwo on Sunday ahead of our next test flight. The flight window opens tomorrow morning. Read about our aims for this flight here https://t.co/FPuuC0NHoM pic.twitter.com/qy263qxTAW — Virgin Galactic (@virgingalactic) February 19, 2019

"We'll have several minutes of weightlessness to enjoy before we come back down," Virgin Galactic's chief pilot, David Mackay, said in a video posted before the planned test. "On the way back down in feather configuration, we'll be looking at how it handles in the feather, how easy it is to control in the feather."

Feather configuration refers to the space plane's wings, which extend (fold down) for stability and speed control during reentry and landing. A deadly October 31, 2014 crash of a previous Virgin Galactic space plane was caused when the pilot unlocked the folding wings prematurely.

Despite that accident, Virgin Galactic says hundreds of customers have signed up for brief suborbital flights into space. A ticket costs $250,000.

Virgin Galactic's founder, British billionaire Richard Branson, has said he's planning on making his own trip into space aboard a company space plane. "My wish is to go up on the 50th anniversary of the moon landing," he said earlier this month. The anniversary of Apollo 11, which brought astronauts to the moon for the first time, falls on July 20.

And Virgin Galactic may not be the only option for wannabe astronauts looking for a few minutes of weightlessness in the void.

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk said in September that the company would fly a Japanese billionaire around the moon aboard its Big Falcon spaceship in 2023. And Jeff Bezos' rocket company, Blue Origin, plans to charge customers $200,000 to $300,000 for brief suborbital flights aboard its New Shepard spacecraft sometime this year.

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