Without any humans on board, the rocket lifted off from Blue
Origin's West Texas launch site Monday morning as the company's
23rd New Shepard mission, aiming to send NASA-funded experiments
and other payloads to the edge of space to float for a few
minutes in microgravity.
But just over a minute after liftoff, and roughly 5 miles (8.05
km) above ground, the New Shepard booster's engines flared
unexpectedly during ascent. The capsule's abort motor system
triggered almost immediately, jetting the craft away from the
faulty rocket before parachuting back to land intact.
The booster crashed within a designated hazard area, according
to the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration, which oversees and
regulates launchsite safety. Blue Origin's fleet of New Shepard
rockets is grounded until the FAA signs off on the outcome of a
company-led investigation into the mishap, the agency added.
"During today’s flight, the capsule escape system successfully
separated the capsule from the booster," Blue Origin tweeted
after the mishap. "The booster impacted the ground. There are no
reported injuries; all personnel have been accounted for."
The mission, called NS-23, was the first New Shepard launch
without humans aboard in over a year, and the fourth mission in
2022. The rocket-capsule system has flown 31 people in all under
Blue Origin's suborbital space tourism business, in which paying
customers are launched some 62 miles high for a few minutes of
microgravity at the edge of space before their capsule returns
to land under parachutes.
Billionaire Bezos, the Amazon.com Inc founder who started Blue
Origin in 2000, was among the first passengers to fly New
Shepard during its debut crewed mission in 2021.
The rocket that crashed on Monday had flown eight times before,
but it was not immediately clear whether those past missions
included humans. Blue Origin flew New Shepard 15 times before
its first crewed flight.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette in WashingtonEditing by Chizu
Nomiyama and Matthew Lewis)
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