In a landmark step, business tycoon Richard Branson’s Virgin Orbit project on Sunday successfully flew a rocket into space from the wing of a Boeing 747 plane, paving the way for a new method of launching low-cost satellites.

After a failed test in May, it was the company’s second attempt at the feat.

“LauncherOne has reached orbit! Everyone on the team who is not in mission control right now is going absolutely bonkers,” the company tweeted from its Twitter account at 2049 GMT, AFP reported.

After taking off from Mojave Air and Space Port in the desert north of Los Angeles the plane launched the rocket over the Pacific Ocean.

Virgin Orbit, founded by British billionaire Richard Branson in 2012, wants to offer quick and flexible service for operators of small satellites, weighing between 300 and 500 kilos (600 to 1,00 pounds), a market which is booming.

The 70-foot (21-metre) Virgin Orbit rocket, named LauncherOne, is strapped to the underside of a wing on a converted 747 plane named Cosmic Girl, AFP reported.

When it reaches the required altitude, the plane releases the rocket, whose own engine fires up to push it into Earth’s orbit and places its payload in space.

Theoretically, launching a rocket from a plane is more flexible than a vertical blast off because all a company needs is an airstrip rather than a space launchpad.

Richard Branson has founded another space company, Virgin Galactic, which is using a similar concept with the goal of taking tourists into space to experience weightlessness some 50 miles (80 kilometres) above the surface of the Earth.