Jeff Bezos rocket company tests spacecraft

The Amazon.com founder's Blue Origin rocket company blasted its New Shepard rocket to a height of 119 km on Wednesday.

The booster of the New Shepard rocket

Blue Origin rocket company has shot a capsule higher into space. (AAP)

Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin rocket company has shot a capsule higher into space than it's ever done before.

The New Shepard rocket blasted off from West Texas on the company's latest test flight. Once the booster separated, the capsule's escape motor fired, lifting the spacecraft to an altitude of 119 km.

It's part of a safety system intended to save lives once space tourists and others climb aboard for sub-orbital hops.

Wednesday's passenger was Mannequin Skywalker, an instrumented dummy in a blue flight suit that's flown before, plus science experiments.

The booster and capsule - both repeat flyers - landed successfully. It was the ninth test flight and lasted 11 minutes.

"Crew Capsule looks great even after it was pushed hard by the escape test. Astronauts would have had an exhilarating ride and safe landing," Bezos said in a tweet .

"Great engineering and the lucky boots worked again."

Blue Origin has yet to announce when it will start selling tickets or how much flights will cost. Launch commentator Ariane Cornell promised it would be soon. "It's coming," she said.

Bezos, founder and chief executive of Amazon, aims to send people and payloads into orbit from Cape Canaveral. Those missions will rely on the bigger, more powerful New Glenn rocket still under development.

He's named his rockets after NASA's original Mercury astronauts Alan Shepard, the first American in space, and John Glenn, the first American to orbit the Earth.


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Published 19 July 2018 12:50pm
Source: AAP


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