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Blue Origin hot fires New Glenn rocket, setting up a launch early next year
Emphasis on ferociter Blue Origin hot fires New Glenn rocket, setting up a launch early next year Also on Friday, the company obtained a launch license for New Glenn launch attempts. Eric Berger Dec 27, 2024 9:20 pm | 0 New Glenn rocket undergoes a hot-fire test on Friday evening in Florida. Credit: Blue Origin New Glenn rocket undergoes a hot-fire test on Friday evening in Florida. Credit: Blue Origin Story textSizeSmallStandardLargeWidth *StandardWideLinksStandardOrange* Subscribers only Learn moreAfter a long day of stops and starts that stretched well into the evening, and on what appeared to be the company's fifth attempt Friday, Blue Origin successfully ignited the seven main engines on its massive New Glenn rocket.The test firing as fog built over the Florida coast marks the final major step in the rocket company's campaign to bring the New Glenn rocketa privately developed, super-heavy lift vehicleto launch readiness. Blue Origin said it fired the vehicle's engines for a duration of 24 seconds. They fired at full thrust for 13 of those seconds."This is a monumental milestone and a glimpse of whats just around the corner for New Glenns first launch," said Jarrett Jones, senior vice president of the New Glenn program, in a news release. "Todays success proves that our rigorous approach to testingcombined with our incredible tooling and design engineeringis working as intended."Completion of the dynamic hot-fire test sets up a historic moment for the company founded by Jeff Bezos nearly a quarter of a century ago, the firm's first ever orbital launch attempt. It will occur from Launch Complex-36, at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.Blue Origin's post-test update did not include a launch date, but based on flight advisory information, a no-earlier than launch date is likely to be January 6.A license to flyFriday was important for New Glenn's debut mission in another way. Several hours before the test firing, the Federal Aviation Administration said it had issued a launch license for the rocket. The license allows Blue Origin to conduct orbital missions from Cape Canaveral with New Glenn, as well as to attempt first stage landings on a barge in the Atlantic Ocean. The license is valid for five years.After years of waiting, the much-anticipated mission is finally coming together.The hot-fire test, taking place just two days after the Christmas holiday in the United States, reflects the urgency that Bezos has injected into his rocket company over the last 18 months. In the fall of 2023, Bezos ousted Bob Smith as chief executive of Blue Origin, and tapped a long-time Amazon executive, Dave Limp, to lead the company.During an interview at the time, Bezos acknowledged that Blue Origin was moving more slowly than he had hoped. "Blue Origin needs to be much faster, and it's one of the reasons that I left my role as the CEO of Amazon a couple of years ago," he said. "I wanted to come in, and Blue Origin needs me right now. Adding some energy, some sense of urgency. We need to move much faster. And we're going to."Over the last year the company has appeared to be more nimble as it raced toward the launch pad, completing work on its ground-based infrastructure, assembling the rocket, and preparing a fleet of ships upon which Blue Origin intends to land New Glenn's first stage for potential reuse.Alive in 2025At the end of October, the company rolled the rocket's first stage from its production facility in Florida to the launch pad, and about three weeks later, just before the US Thanksgiving holiday, the company moved the integrated first and second stage out to the launch pad for testing.Now that the hot-fire test is completed, the company will roll the rocket back into a large integration hangar to install the small "Blue Ring" spacecraft, a test version of an in-space transportation vehicle the company is developing for last-mile and other services for payloads in space.Then the completed rocket will be rolled back out to the launch site in Florida for an attempt, possibly as soon as the first week of the new year.The launch comes at an important time in the US space industry. The incoming Trump White House is expected to take a hard look at NASA's current plans for the Artemis Program to return humans to the Moon, and if New Glenn can prove itself to be a reliable heavy lift rocket, it could have an important role to play in getting humans to the lunar surface.Eric BergerSenior Space EditorEric BergerSenior Space Editor Eric Berger is the senior space editor at Ars Technica, covering everything from astronomy to private space to NASA policy, and author of two books: Liftoff, about the rise of SpaceX; and Reentry, on the development of the Falcon 9 rocket and Dragon. A certified meteorologist, Eric lives in Houston. 0 Comments
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