Hello, this is bbc news. The headlines mps, including conservatives expelled from the party, are preparing legal action, in case borisjohnson refuses to request a brexit delay. The labour leader, jeremy corbyn, has said the government has a duty to comply with the will of parliament. The courts make a decision to try to make a Prime Minister abide by the law made by a parliament of which he isa law made by a parliament of which he is a member. These are strange times for democracy. Its the law of the land and he is under an obligation to obey it. If he doesnt obey it he can be taken to court and if necessary the court will issue an injunction ordering him to do it. And if he doesnt obey the injuction he can be sent to prison. Satellite images appear to show the iranian oil tanker, adrian darya 1, previously impounded in gibraltar, is now off the syrian coast. Ukraine prisoners are united with theirfamilies, as part of swap with russia. Its hoped it will ease tensions between the two neighbours. Now on bbc news, click travels to new mexico to speak to the team behind Virgin Galactics plans to put tourists into space. This week Spaceport America. Superfast weather satellites. And using vr to understand Cancer Treatment and recovery. 50 years after the first humans landed on the moon, a new space race is under way. But today, it is notjust nations that are competing to put ships and people into space. Private companies are getting in on it as well. In fact, they are leading the charge. Elon musks spacex already delivers cargo to the iss, and is now one of several Companies Exploring the notion of Space Tourism putting non professional astronauts into space. It has also signed up billionaire Yusaku Maezawa to take a trip around the moon. Amazon boss and the worlds richest man, jeff bezos, is also planning to take passengers to the edge of space by the end of 2019, with his company blue origin, and has ambitions to land humans on the moon by 202a. But there is one company that is further along the Space Tourism journey than any other, and now Virgin Galactic has opened the doors to its new hq and given marc cieslak exclusive access. Fire, fire. It is a little after 7 00am, and im heading into the desert in new mexico, about 20 miles past a place called truth or consequences. The reason for that really early start is that we are going to get a very rare glimpse inside that. It bills itself as the worlds very first commercial spaceport. Thank you very much. Welcome to spaceport. Thank you. The only way that you can get to space today is with the russians, and theyre currently charging nasa about 80 million a ticket. Spaceport america is the new home of Virgin Galactic, the Company Founded by billionaire Sir Richard Branson to take paying customers on 90 minute flights to the edge of space. The spaceports exterior is the product of british architects foster partners. Eventually, five spaceships and two carrier aircraft will reside in the hangar. Passengers will also receive three days training here before blasting off into the upper atmosphere. And spaceship from base, you go from zero minus 10 on time. It is also home to mission control, where all Flight Operations are monitored from, and this is the very first time that a tv crew has been allowed to film inside this room. Winds are holding, 1. 62. Virgin galactic has moved all of its operations to new mexico from its original base in mojave, california. The white knight two mothership aircraft has already moved in, and continues flight testing. But the actual spacecraft, dubbed spaceshiptwo, will arrive at Spaceport America at a later date. The carrier aircraft is really performing a rehearsal for a real spaceflight. It is going to ascend to the altitude where it would normally release a spaceship, perform a few manoeuvres, and come back around to land on this runway. Scotsman dave mackay is Virgin Galactics chief pilot. He takes me for a drive along the spaceports two mile runway. This is something that i wanted to do all my life. I wanted to be an astronaut, and i wanted to go to space. Dave successfully completed a spaceflight earlier this year, and has been awarded his commercial astronauts wings. Welcome to the club, astronaut. Thanks, base. I like this club. What is the spaceship like to fly . The spacecraft is amazing to fly. At launch, were sitting underneath white knight two. At release, its like going over the top of a rollercoaster, so you get this lightness in your stomach, which is nice. Two, one release, release, release. You havent lit the rocket motor yet, so there is silence just for a few seconds. We light the rocket motor. Fire, fire. So we accelerate away. Within a few seconds, we go through the sound barrier. We go mach 1. We are going to space. The sky goes from blue to dark blue to black in what seems like a few seconds. Immediately after shutdown, you are in weightlessness. That point, well allow the customers to unstrap. At the end of boost, you are there with no forces on your body, no motion, because itsjust sitting there, and no sound. As we are coming back down, in this feathered configuration, now were a glider, and weve got about 15 20 minutes of gliding to come back down and land at spaceport. So different, really, to what i expected, that the words that came out of my mouth was this is unreal just astonishing. The curvature of the earth, you see so much of it that you now get a sense of scale, of the size of the planet. And in the meantime, youre looking out into this blackness of space, and you cant help but think, well, what else is out there . I think something that a lot of people will take away with them after their spaceflight is how thin the atmosphere is, and how important it is to look after it. So far, over 600 people have signed up to take a flight with Virgin Galactic, with tickets costing £200,000. But, at a time of increased concern about the environment, is it responsible to send wealthy people to space for fun . Actually, the environmental impact, the c02 impact of this vehicle, is much less than you would think. By air launching it, and because its so small and uses carbon fibre, we actually dont have a very big rocket motor in the back. And so the per person co2 emissions is, for the average flight, around that of a Business Class flight from new york to the uk. Theres an awareness of our planet documented scientifically with astronauts. They come back changed, with a greater realisation of the fragility of our ecosystem and ecosphere. The irony of this idea isnt lost on space experts, though. The fact that they have to go that far into space above the planet to have that emotion of feeling protective over the world that they live in is sort of ridiculous. But you have to put it into perspective of the fact that space travel is very limited in how much it actually contributes to c02 emissions, in comparison to aircraft. Its a tiny fraction of what aircraft put out there. There have been delays and setbacks for Virgin Galactic. In 2014, one of its spacecraft crashed during flight testing, resulting in the death of its co pilot and serious injuries for the pilot. Dave mackay acknowledges the time that testing is taking. So, if you look at military test programmes, the risk levels are different. Were building a safe, reliable commercial system. Its very, very different to everything that has been done before. But we still have some more flights to do, with more people in the back, and once weve done a few more of those flights, well be ready to start commercial operation. So were getting very close. It has taken longer than i guess we thought it would do initially, but i dont think with hindsight, i dont think thats at all surprising. On paper, Space Tourism can seem a bit frivolous, but we are moving into an era of commercialisation of space travel anyway. Most government funded experiments in space, either on a space station or probes for other planets, are going to be shipped out to commercial companies, and so furthering space travel in that sense is actually going to benefit from Space Tourism as well. So we have to take into account not just the impact of Space Tourism in the sense of our economy, but also the impact from the life changing impact that the people who will be on those planes will go through, and the impact they will have when they return to earth. When do you think Virgin Galactic is going to be putting paying customers up into space . When is the date when is that going to happen . Right now, according to our current projections, we think that we can start commercial operations next year. So the race is on. Space could be about to get a lot more crowded for those that can afford the price of a ticket, of course. Wow, that was marc. This is marc. How was your trip to almost space . It was great. Its difficult not to get excited by spaceships. Yeah. So weve got amazon doing blue 0rigin, we have spacex doing a variety of Space Tourism projects, and now we have Virgin Galactic as well. They look like they have the most advanced proposition. But how would you rate these Different Companies . Theyre all completely different, and they all have their own advantages, their plus points. But, you know, virgin has got a spaceport that is pretty much up and running. Looking at blue 0rigins idea, jeff bezos is suggesting that it might be autonomous. So they might launch, with the tourists inside, theyd look out the windows and see the earth, and then it will land back on the earth without a pilot. Now, ive got an amazon echo, and alexa can barely understand me. So whether the Company Behind the technology whether i would trust them to send me to space or not autonomously, i dont know. To be fair, though, spacex are launching rockets and landing them autonomously. Yes, they are, in all fairness. There is talk that they may be building one or even more spaceports here in the uk. Yes, there is. Is that a realistic goal . Yes, there is a lot of chatter about spaceports being built in the uk. The most serious one is probably the cornwall project, so a runway project. It would be very similar to what we saw out in new mexico, so aircraft launched space vehicles. So Something Like launching from virgin 0rbit, a big 7117 with a rocket, underneath the wind, or a mothership, looks as if it is a goer. Looks as if it could happen, but not for quite a long time yet. The second project is up in scotland, and that is more likely to be a traditional rocket launch facility, so just rockets go straight up, no runway. 0k, marc, cheers. Hello and welcome to the week in tech. It was the week that twitter Ceo Jack Dorsey had his own account hacked. The profile, which has more than 4 million followers, posted a flurry of racist tweets for about 15 minutes. Paypal suspended an account in the United States being used to raise funds for the ku klux klan. And facebook said it was considering testing hiding likes, following a similar experiment on instagram in august. Details of a full scale rollout havent been revealed. Now, it may not be the most efficient way to send mail, but a british inventor has delivered a letterfrom the uk mainland to the isle of wight using only a jet powered suit, 85 years after the idea of a rocket post failed. Richard browning has followed in the footsteps of german entrepreneur gerhard zucker, who tried to send mail by rocket to the island in 193a. Researchers at mit have developed a new robotic thread which could help treat blood clots in stroke patients. The thread is steered by magnets instead of the current hand operated method, potentially making it safer for both patients and surgeons. It is hoped, in the future, procedures could even be carried out remotely. And finally, is that 0bi wan bon jovi . No, it is the lego droid 0rchestra. They took 3,000 hours assembling 30 ipads, 46 r2dzs, 25 gonks and 2a mouse droids to recreate the iconic star wars theme. A truly stellar performance. In the uk, one in two of us will be diagnosed with cancer at some point in our lifetimes. That is a terrifying statistic. Yet unless you or someone close to you has been through it, it can be hard to really comprehend the experience. And while everyones journey is different, one woman has made a Vr Experience to illustrate hers. It is the last chemo today. Bafta Award Winning filmmaker victoria mapplebeck has created the waiting room, combining a smartphone shot video documentary and this Virtual Reality experience. She aims to fully immerse the audience in the unnerving position of being up close and personal with cancer diagnosis, treatment and in this case, recovery. I wanted to make visible the often invisible parts of Cancer Treatment the hair loss, the nausea, the fear and the effect on family. This reconstruction of victorias final radiotherapy session is combined with a cgi journey through her body, looking at the cancer cells, and what ct scans, mammograms and ultrasounds found. When the experience first starts, you can initially feel as though you are actually the patient, then when you look down you realise youre not, youre a fly on the wall. What makes you want to do this as somebody looking at what was going on, rather than being the person experiencing it . We did at the beginning of the project think very hard about whether we wanted it to be an embodied experience, where you are effectively the patient, and ifelt quite uncomfortable with that, and i wanted instead to kind of create a fly on the wall perspective, you feel it is very intimate, you feel as if you are looking right down on me, almost next to me. What were the benefits you felt there were in conveying this in Virtual Reality . In a flat film you are in a cinema and looking at what is happening to the characters, what is happening to the story, youre not necessarily thinking about your own position within that. With vr you are almost thinking, who am i . What am i doing in this space . This was shot on a head mounted gopro some more interactive elements like allowing the user to hear their own heartbeat and breath have been trialled, but i agreed with victorias conclusion that they were actually distracting. Midway through chemo, i asked my oncologist if they still have my tumour samples. When it came to sound, though, subtle effects could convey profound meaning. 0n phone hiya, its dad. We would like that. You have the actual sound of the scene with the nurses around you and you hear them around you as they are, so we created this relationship composite of voices, we have her son in the centre of her life, then we have the father on the right hand side on the opposite side of the mum, then we have to the left and to the right, we have her brothers. We feel that you will have a better chance. Then we have the oncologist which is basically a little bit above the son, because he is also right in this situation in the centre of her life. Wow. That was quite something. Amazing storytelling, but also, i think the thing that really, really stood out to me was a feeling of loneliness, of being really isolated, in being the person who has cancer, going through all that treatment where your life enters another zone, and hearing all the voices of friends and family, medical experts, but still feeling quite lonely inside. Oh god, it is more than i thought. Victoria came to make this feeling there wasnt enough out there from the patients perspective. And now she is hoping forfunding to take the project to hospitals and cancer centres to share her experience. Satellites. They are always up there, watching us, connecting us, guiding us. But is an expensive Business Building a satellite cost a lot. Getting it into orbit costs even more. That was, until 1999 when two engineers invented the idea of the cubesat a cheap, standardised mini satellite that could be fitted into the spare space around other payloads in a rocket. Suddenly you didnt have to organise your own launch, you could hitch a ride on someone elses. That made satellites available to places who could not have afforded them before. Small companies, researchers and Even University students. We basically took this approach of giving them minimum resources so they could not do anything too complicated. And then you standardise it and make it small so two things happen. 0ne, it is cheap and easy to put on a rocket, and second, you have a lot of people building the same thing, so now we have numbers behind us. Before, every university was trying to launch their own spacecraft. The industry is now worth hundreds of millions of pounds, and over the years we have looked at cubesats that observe the ocean, the land and mayjust create fireworks for the 2020 tokyo 0lympics. And to help mark the 20th anniversary of this remarkable invention, we have sent meteorologist peter gibbs to find out about the latest edition, an all new weather cubesat. The river clyde here in glasgow used to be one of the main shipbuilding centres in the world. That is now long gone, but they are building a different kind of ship here now spaceships. Just up the road, they are putting together a revolutionary new kind of weather satellite, and thats what im here to see. Clyde space is one of the companies who have built some of the nearly 2,000 cubesats launched into space in the last four years. As a meteorologist and a bit of a space fan, i am excited to see the tech that could potentially improve weather forecasting. But before i get a chance to be near a cubesat, well, i have to look a little ridiculous. So this is a basic cubesat unit. Just 10 centimetres by 10 centimetres. Packed with electronics, you can see the solar panels on the side if you need something bigger you canjust add more units to whatever size you need. It is a fantastic innovation. On