FAA Grounds Blue Origin's New Glenn Following Mission Anomaly
Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket has been grounded by the FAA following an upper-stage anomaly during its third launch that resulted in a customer satellite failing to reach its orbit.
Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket has been grounded by the FAA following an upper-stage anomaly during its third launch that resulted in a customer satellite failing to reach its orbit.
Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket failed to reach the correct orbit during its third launch. The FAA has grounded the vehicle to conduct a formal investigation into the upper-stage anomaly.
Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket has been grounded by the FAA following a failed orbital insertion during its latest mission. This is a significant setback for the company’s heavy-launch system ambitions.
Blue Origin successfully reused its New Glenn booster for the first time, but the mission suffered a major setback when the upper stage failed to deliver its satellite payload to the correct orbit.
Blue Origin successfully recovered its New Glenn first-stage booster, marking a major milestone for reusability, though an upper-stage failure resulted in a partial mission success.
Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket launch is a critical bid to challenge SpaceX’s monopoly, signaling an era of intense competition in sustainable, high-frequency space transportation.
Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin has launched 'Project Sunrise,' an initiative to build space-based data centers using a 50,000-satellite constellation. The project focuses on high-energy on-orbit computing to bypass terrestrial energy limits and provide low-latency processing for global AI and defense applications.
Blue Origin has announced 'Project Sunrise,' a plan to deploy a 50,000-satellite megaconstellation designed for orbital high-energy computing and data storage. This ambitious project aims to complement terrestrial cloud infrastructure by leveraging the resilience and solar resources of space. Supported by recent scientific research into orbital RAID architectures, the move signals a shift in the space race toward 'orbital compute sovereignty' and presents new challenges for space traffic regulation and international data laws.