The suborbital "New Shepard" spacecraft reached an altitude of more than 93 kilometers in its inaugural flight
April 30, 2015 | and |Blue Origin, a company founded by Amazon.com's billionaire founder Jeff Bezos, launched the New Shepard spacecraft from its West Texas proving grounds
The private spaceflight company Blue Origin launched a surprise test of its suborbital New Shepard spaceship on Wednesday (April 29), a mission that successfully demonstrated the space capsule but failed to recover its reusable rocket booster.
Blue Origin, a company founded by Amazon.com's billionaire founder Jeff Bezos, launched the New Shepard spacecraft from its West Texas proving grounds. shows it soaring up to an altitide of 307,000 feet (93,573 meters).
"The in-space separation of the crew capsule from the propulsion module was perfect," . "Any astronauts on board would have had a very nice journey into space and a smooth return." []
A longer, shows the vehicle rising into the blue Texas sky, with the passenger capsule separating from its booster and parachuting back to Earth. The two videos released by Blue Origin did not show the descent of the rocket booster—dubbed the "propulsion module"—which is designed to make a vertical landing and be reused on future .
In his statement, Bezos confirmed that the rocket booster was lost during the test.
"Of course one of our goals is reusability, and unfortunately we didn't get to recover the propulsion module because we lost pressure in our hydraulic system on descent," Bezos wrote. "Fortunately, we've already been in work for some time on an improved hydraulic system. Also, assembly of propulsion module serial numbers 2 and 3 is already underway—we'll be ready to again soon."
Wednesday's New Shepard test flight reached a maximum altitude of 58 miles (93 kilometers)—just a few miles short of the 62-mile-high (100 km) boundary between Earth and space. The demonstration flight occurred just weeks after Blue Origin President Rob Meyerson announced that .
This view from Blue Origin's New Shepard spacecraft shows the separation from its propulsion module during an April 29, 2015 test flight over West Texas.In his statement, Bezos added that Blue Origin has also already begun work on a larger, orbital spacecraft that it calls the Very Big Brother to New Shepard.
The Very is "an orbital launch vehicle that is many times New Shepard's size," according to Bezos. It will be powered by the company's more powerful BE-4 rocket engine.
SPACE.com
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