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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
Business
Dominic Gates

Bezos' space company reveals plans for new rocket

SEATTLE _ Blue Origin, the space exploration company founded by Amazon boss Jeff Bezos, on Monday revealed plans for a new heavy-lift rocket to take commercial satellites and humans into orbit.

Bezos even hinted at plans beyond that for a mission to return humans to the moon.

The proposed New Glenn rocket _ named after John Glenn, the first American to go into orbit around the earth _ will come in 2- and 3-stage versions, the latter more than 300 feet tall.

That's much bigger than the current-generation, single-stage Blue Origin rocket, which has successfully flown repeated sub-orbital missions to the edge of space, 100 kilometers or about 60 miles aloft.

Like that first rocket _ New Shepard, named after Alan Shepard, the first American in space _ the proposed orbital rocket will have a first-stage booster designed to come back down and land intact to be re-used on subsequent missions.

New Shepard has now flown to space and returned its booster stage to earth in a soft landing four times.

In an emailed statement, Bezos said Blue Origin plans to fly New Glenn for the first time before the end of this decade from Cape Canaveral, Fa.

In taking this next step, Blue Origin, based in the Seattle area, enters into more direct competition with United Launch Alliance and with Elon Musk's SpaceX.

The booster for both variants of the New Glenn rocket will be about 170 feet tall _ more than three times taller than New Shepard's booster. Its diameter will be 23 feet and it will lift off with 3.85 million pounds of thrust, according to Blue Origin.

It will be powered by seven BE-4 engines, each generating 550,000 pounds of thrust. This engine is now under development by Blue Origin, scheduled for first flight in 2019 and powered by liquified natural gas and liquid oxygen.

Blue Origin has agreed to provide the same engine to United Launch Alliance, the Boeing-Lockheed Martin joint venture, to power its planned Vulcan orbital space rocket, expected to fly in 2019.

The New Glenn 2-stage model is 270 feet tall in total. Its second stage will be powered by a single BE-4 engine.

The 3-stage version, with another section stacked vertically on top of the 2-stage model, is 313 feet tall.

This third stage will be powered by a single BE-3 engine, which is Blue Origin's current-generation engine, burning liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen and generating one fifth the thrust of the BE-4.

The 3-stage variant is capable of flying missions beyond low earth orbit.

Blue Origin rival SpaceX has already sent its Falcon 9 rockets into orbit and returned the booster stages to earth.

However, the pioneering company suffered a major setback with a catastrophic launch pad explosion of a Falcon 9 at Cape Canaveral on Sept. 1.

That will likely delay its plans for a heavy-lift version, the Falcon Heavy.

Bezos ended his email with a tease for the future.

Calling New Glenn "a very important step," he added, "It won't be the last of course."

"Up next on our drawing board: New Armstrong," Bezos wrote, referring to Neil Armstrong, the first man to walk on the moon. "But that's a story for the future."

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