Blue Origin's New Glenn Rocket Grounded After Upper Stage Failure Loses Satellite Payload
Reusable booster successfully lands but upper stage fails to deliver AST SpaceMobile communications satellite to correct orbit
Auf einen Blick
- Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket successfully landed its reusable booster on a drone ship during the NG-3 mission, marking the first reuse of a flown booster.
- However, the upper stage failed to place the AST SpaceMobile BlueBird 7 satellite in the correct orbit, placing it too low for operations.
- The FAA has grounded New Glenn pending investigation, with Blue Origin CEO Dave Limp acknowledging the BE-3U engine didn't produce sufficient thrust.
KI-generierte Zusammenfassung
Warum es wichtig ist
Blue Origin's New Glenn is a heavy-lift orbital rocket designed to compete with SpaceX's Falcon 9. The program had successfully completed two flights before this failure, with the booster reuse being a key milestone for cost reduction.
The Blue Origin New Glenn rocket lifts off from LC36 at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, in Cape Canaveral, Florida. Earlier this week, Blue Origin founder Jeff Bezos shared a photo of the space company's New Glenn rockets. Bezos' post on X, formerly Twitter, got 'Congrats' message from CEO of Blue Origin's biggest rival SpaceX. This was the first time Blue Origin re-used a previously flown New Glenn booster — the same one that flew during New Glenn's second mission. Roughly 10 minutes after liftoff, the booster came back down and landed on a drone ship in the ocean, just like it had last November. The footage of the booster's landing on Drone ship is what Bezos shared on X, and Elon Musk offered his 'congratulations' on. However, after initial lift-off and landing the rockets failed at its primary mission: Delivering a communications satellite to orbit for customer AST SpaceMobile. Roughly two hours after the launch, Blue Origin itself announced in its own post that the New Glenn upper stage placed AST SpaceMobile's satellite in an "off-nominal orbit." In layman's language, the rocket looked good on the way up, but the upper stage wasn't able to put its payload into the correct orbit. AST SpaceMobile too issued a statement that the upper stage of the New Glenn rocket placed BlueBird 7 satellite into an orbit that was "lower than planned." The satellite successfully separated from the rocket and powered on, the company said, but the altitude is too low "to sustain operations" and will now have to be de-orbited — left to burn up in the atmosphere of Earth. Blue Origin CEO Dave Limp on mission's 'failure' Blue Origin CEO Dave Limp too said in a post that the company "clearly didn't deliver the mission". He wrote, "Now that we have a more complete view, we wanted to provide an update on our NG-3 mission. While we are pleased with the nominal booster recovery, we clearly didn't deliver the mission our customer wanted, and our team expects. Early data suggest that on our second GS2 burn, one of the BE-3U engines didn't produce sufficient thrust to reach our target orbit. Blue Origin is leading the anomaly investigation with FAA oversight to learn from the data and implement the improvements needed to quickly return to flight operations. We have been in steady communication with the team at AST SpaceMobile, we appreciate their partnership, and we're looking forward to many flights together." This represents the first major failure for Blue Origin's New Glenn programme, which only made its first flight in January 2025. This was reportedly the second mission where New Glenn carried a customer payload to space, after launching twin spacecraft bound for Mars on behalf of NASA last November. FAA grounds Blue Origin's New Glenn The Federal Aviation Administration has grounded Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket following launch from Cape Canaveral. "The FAA is aware that Blue Origin New Glenn 3 experienced a mishap during the second-stage flight sequence following a successful launch," according to an FAA statement. "The FAA notified NASA, the NTSB, and the U.S. Space Force about the classification of the incident." FAA guidelines will require Blue Origin to complete an investigation into the event before the rocket is allowed to fly again. "A mishap investigation is designed to enhance public safety, determine the root cause of the event, and identify corrective actions to avoid it from happening again. A return to flight is based on the FAA determining that any system, process, or procedure related to the mishap doesn't affect public safety." The FAA has reportedly grounded several rockets because of mishaps in recent years, including SpaceX's Falcon 9 and in-development Starship. Blue Origin had its smaller, suborbital New Shepard rocket grounded as well.
Worauf zu achten ist
KI-Ausblick — Möglichkeiten, keine Fakten
FAA will complete investigation within 3-6 months
Wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Monaten
Blue Origin will return to flight with corrected BE-3U engine
Sehr wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Monaten
Offene Fragen
- What specific component caused the BE-3U engine thrust failure?
- How long will the FAA investigation take?
- Will AST SpaceMobile need to build a replacement satellite?
- What is the total financial impact to Blue Origin?