Blue Origin reuses New Glenn booster successfully amid upper stage failure

Blue Origin achieved a milestone by successfully landing and reusing the first stage of its New Glenn rocket for the third flight, but the upper stage failed to place its payload into the correct orbit. The launch occurred Sunday from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. The booster, named Never Tell Me The Odds, touched down on a ship in the Atlantic Ocean after its second flight.

The New Glenn rocket lifted off at 7:25 a.m. EDT (11:25 UTC) from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. Powered by seven methane-fueled BE-4 engines, the 321-foot-tall vehicle separated its first stage three minutes into the flight. The booster then executed braking burns and landed precisely on Blue Origin's ocean platform nearly 400 miles southeast of the launch site less than 10 minutes after liftoff. This marked the second flight for Never Tell Me The Odds, which debuted in November, with new engines installed for this mission. Blue Origin CEO Dave Limp said the company intends to reuse those engines from the prior launch on future flights. Blue Origin confirmed payload separation but noted the AST SpaceMobile satellite, BlueBird 7, was placed into an off-nominal orbit. AST SpaceMobile stated the orbit was too low to sustain operations, and the roughly six-ton spacecraft will be de-orbited, with costs recovered via insurance. US Space Force tracking data showed a perigee of just 95 miles (154 km), far below the targeted 285 miles (460 km) at 49-degree inclination. The upper stage, powered by two BE-3U engines, had succeeded on the first two New Glenn flights in January and November 2025. This setback follows recent upper stage issues for other rockets like SpaceX's Starship and Falcon 9. Blue Origin aims for faster launch rates through booster reuse to compete with SpaceX.

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Grounded New Glenn rocket at Cape Canaveral after NG-3 upper stage mishap, with engineers reviewing failed orbit trajectory.
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FAA grounds New Glenn after NG-3 mission upper stage mishap

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The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has grounded Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket following a partial failure during its third mission, NG-3, launched Sunday from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. An upper-stage engine issue prevented the BlueBird 7 satellite from reaching its target 285-mile orbit, achieving only about 95 miles. This incident, the second grounding for the rocket, will halt flights pending investigation.

Blue Origin chief executive Dave Limp said the company will launch its New Glenn rocket again before the end of 2026 after an explosion at its Florida site last week.

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Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket exploded on Thursday night during a hot-fire test at its launch site in Cape Canaveral, Florida. The detonation created a large fireball visible in the surrounding area. Company founder Jeff Bezos confirmed that all personnel were safe.

NASA has received a full-scale prototype of Blue Origin's Mark 2 crew cabin and will soon begin astronaut training exercises. The development supports the agency's goal of returning humans to the lunar surface in 2028.

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The Federal Aviation Administration has ordered a pause on SpaceX Starship flights while it investigates a mishap during the May 22 launch.

SpaceX's Starlink division confirmed an anomaly with satellite 34343 at around 560 km altitude, resulting in loss of contact and the satellite breaking into tens of pieces. LeoLabs detected the fragment creation event using its radar network in the Azores, Portugal, and described it as likely caused by an internal energetic source. The company stated there is no new risk to other space operations.

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Following their successful launch, NASA's Artemis II astronauts aboard the Orion spacecraft resolved a jammed toilet fan and Microsoft Outlook software glitches during the initial phase of their 10-day lunar orbit mission. The crew—Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, Mission Specialists Jeremy Hansen and Christina Koch—marks historic firsts: Glover as the first Black astronaut, Koch the first woman, and Hansen the first Canadian to venture toward the moon.

 

 

 

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