Skip to main content

Blue Origin’s reusable rocket nails its third landing

Relaunching and relanding the same rocket is turning into a habit for Jeff Bezos and his Blue Origin team.

Their unmanned New Shepard rocket made its third sub-orbital trip Saturday morning before returning to terra firma without a hitch a short time later.

Recommended Videos

Blue Origin CEO Bezos hit Twitter to announce news of yet another successful round trip, describing the latest launch as “flawless” and the booster landing as “perfect.”

The previous launches and landings using Blue Shepard took place in November last year and, more recently, in January.

Saturday’s mission, which carried two microgravity experiments from the Southwest Research Institute and the University of Central Florida, started and finished in west Texas.

Blue Origin hasn’t yet released detailed information on Saturday’s voyage (a video is coming soon), though if it was anything like the last two then it will’ve reached an altitude of around 62.5 miles (330,000 feet) before returning to Earth.

Related: Virgin Galactic unveils its new and improved SpaceShipTwo

Like Blue Origin, SpaceX team is also developing reusable spacecraft technology aimed at significantly reducing the cost of space missions, which besides satellite launches and resupply missions to the International Space Station could one day include far more complex journeys into deep space.

While some observers have downplayed Blue Origin’s achievements, viewing its sub-orbital flights as less challenging when compared to SpaceX’s more complicated orbital missions, Bezos says New Shepard’s current test runs will pave the way for more ambitious rocket-related efforts. Speaking earlier this year, the Amazon founder said Blue Origin is already more than three years into the development of its first orbital vehicle, describing it as “many times larger than New Shepard.”

As for New Shepard, Bezos said in March he wants to begin manned missions using the system as early as next year, with paying customers climbing aboard for orbital adventures perhaps in 2018 following test flights with qualified crew.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
NASA’s mega moon rocket has just begun a 900-mile journey
The core stage of NASA's SLS rocket.

NASA’s powerful Space Launch System (SLS) rocket is set to blast four astronauts to space next year on the epic Artemis II mission that will come within about 80 miles of the lunar surface.

In preparation for the mission, the rocket’s 213-foot-tall (65 meters) core stage has just embarked on a rather more leisurely journey -- on a barge heading for the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

Read more
Is this the most beautiful rocket launch ever?
A Falcon 9 rocket launches from California.

SpaceX chief Elon Musk has shared a video of an astonishingly beautiful Falcon 9 launch.

It shows the start of the NROL-186 mission, which took place last week and deployed next-generation spy satellites for the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO).

Read more
Watch Japan’s H3 rocket roar skyward on its second successful flight
Japan's H3 rocket climbs to orbit.

Japan’s fledgling H3 rocket achieved a successful launch on Monday local time, deploying the Advanced Land Observing Satellite-4 (ALOS-4) to a sun-synchronous orbit.

Japan's space agency, known as JAXA, launched the two-stage hydrogen rocket from the Tanegashima Space Center, located about 620 miles (1,000 kilometers) southwest of Tokyo.

Read more