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Space.com on MSNBlue Origin's 2nd New Glenn rocket launch will fly twin NASA Mars probes to space on Sep. 29
New Glenn will also carry a secondary payload as a part of the NG-2 launch. A technology demonstration from satellite ...
Modern Engineering Marvels on MSN3d
Blue Origin’s New Glenn Faces High-Stakes Mars Test with ESCAPADE
The most dramatic test to date for Blue Origin’s towering New Glenn rocket will not be from low Earth orbit, but from the ...
Blue Origin is readying its New Glenn rocket for its second launch, designated NG-2, with a target date of no earlier than ...
15h
Space.com on MSNWatch Blue Origin launch its 200th payload on 35th New Shepard spaceflight Aug. 23
Blue Origin is flying more than 40 science payloads on board its 35th New Shepard suborbital spaceflight, scheduled to launch ...
Jef Bezos's Blue Origin is preparing for a Mars mission. The New Glenn rocket will launch NASA's ESCAPADE probes in September ...
14h
C4ISRNET on MSNAmentum to modernize launch operations through $4B Space Force contract
Randy Lycans, Amentum’s senior vice president and program manager for the Space Force Range Contract, told Defense News the ...
8d
Space.com on MSNBlue Origin pitches new 'Mars Telecommunications Orbiter' for Red Planet missions (video)
The MTO, which Blue Origin says could lift off by 2028, is designed to deliver much higher bandwidth to Red Planet spacecraft ...
SpaceX's Starship is regarded as the world's largest rocket. How does it compare in height to other launch vehicles from SpaceX, ULA or Blue Origin?
Blue Origin's massive New Glenn rocket, which flew on its inaugural flight test in January 2025 from Cape Canaveral, Florida, is also being developed for future spaceflights.
New Glenn is also tapped by NASA to fly Blue Origin’s Blue Moon lunar landers, one of which is contracted to be the human landing system for the Artemis V mission no earlier than 2029.
First and foremost, one of SpaceX's two core businesses is launching rockets. (The other is its Starlink Internet service).
Blue Origin’s first launch of its New Glenn rocket was supposed to send up a pair of Mars-bound satellites for NASA, but uncertain readiness plans last year forced NASA to yank back its payload.
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