'Road to space': billionaire Bezos has successful suborbital jaunt
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[July 21, 2021]
By Eric M. Johnson
VAN HORN, Texas (Reuters) - Jeff Bezos, the
world's richest person, soared some 66.5 miles (107 km) above the Texas
desert aboard his company Blue Origin's New Shepard launch vehicle
on Tuesday and returned safely to Earth, a historic suborbital flight
that helps usher in a new era of space tourism.
"Best day ever," Bezos, accompanied by three crewmates including the
world's oldest and youngest space travelers, said after his capsule
descended with three large parachutes and touched down, kicking up a
cloud of dust.
The 57-year-old American billionaire, donning a blue flight suit and
cowboy hat, took a trip to the edge of space lasting 10 minutes and 10
seconds. After landing, Bezos and his crewmates exchanged hugs and
popped champagne while roughly two dozen family members and company
employees cheered.
"Astronaut Bezos in my seat - happy, happy, happy," Bezos told mission
control during a safety check after the passengers buckled back in
following a few minutes of weightlessness in space.
The fully autonomous 60-foot-tall (18.3-meters-tall) gleaming white
spacecraft, with a feather design on its side, ignited its BE-3 engine
for a vertical liftoff from Blue Origin's Launch Site One facility about
20 miles (32 km) outside the rural town of Van Horn under mostly clear
skies.
Bezos, founder of ecommerce company Amazon.com Inc, and his brother Mark
Bezos, a private equity executive, were joined by two others. Pioneering
woman aviator Wally Funk , 82, and recent high school graduate Oliver
Daemen , 18, became the oldest and youngest people to reach space.
"I want to thank every Amazon employee and every Amazon customer,
because you guys paid for all of this," Bezos told reporters afterward.
The flight came nine days after Briton Richard Branson was aboard his
competing space tourism venture Virgin Galactic's successful inaugural
suborbital flight from New Mexico. The two flights give
credibility and inject enthusiasm into the fledgling commercial space
tourism industry, which Swiss bank UBS estimates will be worth $3
billion annually in a decade.
Bezos, who founded Blue Origin in 2000, said this first crewed space
flight was a step toward developing a fleet of reusable spacecraft.
"We're going to build a road to space so that our kids and their kids
can build a future," Bezos added. "... We need to do that to solve the
problems here on Earth."
Blue Origin plans for two more New Shepard passenger flights this year.
Bezos said Blue Origin has not determined its pace of flights after that
but is approaching $100 million in private sales.
"The demand is very, very high," Bezos said, adding: "Big things start
small."
Bezos said his company is working "ferociously" toward being able to
reuse New Shepard vehicles at least 100 times. The one used on Tuesday,
twice previously flown to space, scored a bulls-eye landing on a nearby
pad.
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At the top of a news conference after his successful flight to the
edge of space on Tuesday, billionaire Jeff Bezos thanked Amazon
customers and employees at the company he founded, saying "You guys
paid for all this."
BACK FLIPS AND SKITTLES
New Shepard hurtled at speeds reaching 2,233 miles (3,595 km) per
hour, exceeding the "Kármán line" - 62 miles (100 km) - set by an
international aeronautics body to define the boundary between
Earth's atmosphere and space.
After the capsule separated from the booster, the crew unbuckled,
performing back flips and tossing each other Skittles candy in
weightlessness. The capsule then returned to Earth with parachutes,
using a retro-thrust system expelling a "pillow of air" for a soft
landing.
The launch represented another step in the fierce competition to
forge a space tourism sector. In this "billionaire space race,"
Branson pierced Earth's atmosphere first, reaching an altitude of 53
miles (86 km) aboard his rocket-powered, pilot-flown spaceplane.
Bezos flew higher in what experts called the world's first
unpiloted space flight with an all-civilian crew.
Another billionaire tech mogul, Elon Musk, plans to send an
all-civilian crew on a several-day orbital mission on his Crew
Dragon capsule in September.
"Well done," Branson wrote on Twitter, congratulating Bezos and his
crewmates.
Musk earlier wished Blue Origin's crew "best of luck."
The flight came on the 52nd anniversary of Americans Neil Armstrong
and Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin becoming the first humans to walk on the
moon. New Shepard's namesake Alan Shepard in 1961 became the first
American in space.
Funk was one of the so-called Mercury 13 group of women who trained
to become NASA astronauts in the 1960s but was passed over because
of her gender.
"I've been waiting a long time," Funk said afterward. "I want to go
again - fast."
Daemen, Blue Origin's first paying customer, is set to study physics
and innovation management at college in the Netherlands. His
investment executive father embraced him after he emerged from the
capsule.
"The most profound piece of it for me was looking out at the Earth
and looking at the Earth's atmosphere," Bezos said, noting how the
experience underscored the planet's beauty and fragility.
(Reporting by Eric M. Johnson in Van Horn, Texas; Additional
reporting Radhika Anilkumar; Editing by Will Dunham)
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