New Glenn Mission NG-1 Webcast

At the second time of trying, Blue Origin successfully launched its orbital New Glenn rocket from Cape Canaveral in Florida on early Thursday morning ET.

The first-ever launch of the New Glenn represents a major milestone for Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin spaceflight company, marking its entry into the orbital launch market and heavy-lift space industry, and setting it up to compete with the likes of Elon Musk’s SpaceX.


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The countdown was far smoother than Sunday night’s launch attempt when the clock was paused multiple times before Blue Origin finally scrubbed the effort due to technical reasons.

The 98-meter-tall New Glenn rocket blasted skyward from Launch Complex 36, lighting up the Florida sky as it emitted nearly 4 million pounds of thrust, more than double that of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket though less than SpaceX’s heavy-lift Falcon Heavy.

The key aim of the mission is to reach orbit. A bonus will be the deployment of the Blue Ring Pathfinder payload, which is designed to test key technologies for the upcoming Blue Ring spacecraft. The payload includes a communications array, power system, and flight computer, and these will be evaluated during a six-hour mission while remaining attached to the rocket’s second stage.

A secondary objective was to land the first-stage booster on a platform floating off the coast of Florida similar to how SpaceX lands the Falcon 9, but about 14 minutes after launch, confirmation came that the booster had been lost.

More to follow …






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