Blue Origin has now flown – and landed — the same rocket six times

Authored by astronomy.com and submitted by clayt6
image for Blue Origin has now flown – and landed — the same rocket six times

New Shepard combines a reusable booster rocket with a and capsule that can carry cargo — and someday crew. The rocket is named after Alan Shepard , the first American in space. New Shepard launches take it on an 11-minute flight that just crosses the boundary of space. Then, as it returns, the rocket booster lands vertically on Earth’s surface. The capsule comes back with a parachute system.The reusable rocket booster landed successfully on Wednesday. It came back to the launch pad vertically, sending a sonic boom echoing across the desert. Then, it hovered for a moment and touched down on the launch pad. The capsule itself landed nearby with both parachutes fully deployed.In the near future, Blue Origin hopes to transform their capsule from a payload bearing vehicle into to one that can bring humans into space. Crewed missions would allow researchers, students, and space tourists to experience microgravity.Much like other private aerospace companies SpaceX and Boeing, Blue Origin is looking toward the new age “Space Race” just ramping up. With planned future missions to the Moon in upcoming years from both NASA and the private sector, Bezos’s aerospace company is hoping to create a lunar lander that they hope can reach the Moon by 2024.

The_Sly_Trooper on December 12nd, 2019 at 02:15 UTC »

This is the sort of healthy competition with self landing boosters that is going to shoot our species far out into the stars someday soon.

samwe5t on December 12nd, 2019 at 00:05 UTC »

I just realized the name blue origin is referring to earth 😮

LT-COL-Obvious on December 11st, 2019 at 22:45 UTC »

They haven’t actually achieved orbit though right?

Edit: haven’t not have