Skip to main content

Watch this Blue Origin rocket make a record seventh launch and landing

Blue Origin wrapped up another successful mission on Tuesday, in which it launched and landed a single booster for a record seventh time.

Set up by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, Blue Origin has been launching its reusable New Shepard rocket since 2015, with this the company’s 13th successful suborbital flight.

This latest mission, NS-13, was supposed to take place at the end of September, but a technical issue kept it grounded until this week.

With everything fixed, the New Shepard rocket blasted off from Blue Origin’s launch facility in West Texas on Tuesday morning. Separation from the capsule occurred at around 250,000 feet, at which point the booster began its journey back to Earth where it nailed a perfect landing seven-and-a-half minutes after lift-off. The capsule returned from an altitude of around 345,000 feet, landing approximately three minutes after the booster.

Blue Origin’s seventh launch and landing of a single booster is one more than that achieved so far by a Falcon 9 rocket operated by SpaceX, a company that’s also developing a reusable system for more cost-effective space transportation.

NS-13 carried 12 commercial payloads to suborbital space and back. One of the payloads, NASA’s “Deorbit, Descent, and Landing Sensor Demonstration,” was attached to the exterior of the rocket, marking the first time for Blue Origin to send a payload to suborbital space on the outside of its spacecraft rather than inside the capsule.

NASA’s kit was designed to test precision landing technologies for the space agency’s planned Artemis mission to the moon in 2024, which is set to put the first woman and next man on the lunar surface.

“Today’s flight was inspiring,” Bob Smith, CEO, Blue Origin, said in a release, adding, “Using New Shepard to simulate landing on the moon is an exciting precursor to what the Artemis program will bring to America.”

Just prior to the launch, Blue Origin offered its first-ever video tour of the inside of its crew capsule, which is set to carry high-paying passengers on an almost identical flight path as today’s mission as part of an upcoming space tourism service.

Blue Origin has also been working with Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, and Draper to create a prototype of what has the potential to become NASA’s crew lander for its upcoming moon trips. The prototype is now undergoing testing at the space agency’s Johnson Space Center.

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)…
Virgin Galactic delays the launch of its commercial space tourism service
Virgin Galactic's space plane heading to the edge of space.

Virgin Galactic and Blue Origin have emerged as the two leaders in the race to launch a commercial service for sub-orbital space tourism flights.

But while Blue Origin edges toward the launch of its own service -- following two successful crewed flights in three months -- Virgin Galactic has revealed it is delaying its own commercial launch from the middle of next year to the final quarter of 2022.

Read more
How to watch Blue Origin launch William Shatner into space
New Shepard lifts off from Launch Site One in West Texas for the NS-16 mission on July 20, 2021.

Space tourism company Blue Origin will be launching a short flight to space and back featuring a very special crew member: Actor William Shatner, aka Star Trek's Captain Kirk. The launch will be streamed on Wednesday, October 13, and you can watch along live at home.
How to watch the launch
New Shepard Mission NS-18 Webcast

The launch is scheduled for 9:30 a.m ET (6:30 a.m PT) on Wednesday, October 13. Blue Origin will be streaming the launch, with coverage beginning at 8:00 a.m. ET (5:00 a.m. PT).

Read more
Shatner admits he’s ‘a little frightened’ about Wednesday’s rocket ride
William Shatner ahead of his rocket ride.

William Shatner says he’s “a little frightened” about Wednesday’s rocket ride that will see the 90-year-old Star Trek legend become the oldest person to travel to the edge of space.

His Captain Kirk character may have boldly gone places, but Shatner’s admission in a recent interview reveals a few nerves when it comes to this particular mission.

Read more