Blue Origin’s New Shepard spaceship hits new heights in escape test flight

Blue Origin’s New Shepard spaceship blasts off for a high-altitude escape system test. (Blue Origin via YouTube)

As Amazon billionaire Jeff Bezos watched, his Blue Origin space venture sent its reusable New Shepard spaceship to its highest-ever altitude during a successful test of a rocket motor that’s meant to be used only in emergencies.

The climax of the uncrewed test flight came shortly after New Shepard’s capsule separated from its booster and switched on its 70,000-pound-thrust escape rocket motor.

As planned, the high-altitude firing pushed the capsule past the boundary of outer space, to an unofficial maximum altitude of 389,846 feet, or 119 kilometers. Maximum ascent velocity was listed at 2,236 mph.

Then both the booster and the capsule made picture-perfect landings back at Blue Origin’s West Texas test site, within sight of the launch pad. The entire mission lasted 11 minutes and 17 seconds.

“Anything could have happened today, and this is the best possible outcome,” launch commentator Ariane Cornell said.

New Shepard’s reusable booster comes in for a landing. (Blue Origin via YouTube) The New Shepard capsule makes its descent. (Blue Origin via You Tube) New Shepard’s capsule fires its retros as it touches down for a landing. (Blue Origin via YouTube) Blue Origin recaps its mission stats, based on preliminary data.

A sensor-equipped test dummy nicknamed Mannequin Skywalker sat in one of the capsule’s seats. More than half a dozen scientific payloads were packed inside as well, plus mementos from Blue Origin employees that were included as part of an internal “Fly My Stuff” program.

Mannequin Skywalker had a fine ride, Cornell reported.

The escape rocket motor is built into the crew capsule to provide a backup plan in case something goes wrong with New Shepard’s booster. In the event of an emergency, the rocket would light up to push the capsule and its crew out of harm’s way (although the acceleration of up to 10 G’s would make for a rough ride).

Blue Origin tested the motor at a lower altitude during a memorable flight back in October 2016, but the company’s engineers wanted to make sure that the system would work as well at a higher altitude, where the atmosphere thins out to near-nothingness.

To keep the booster from being blasted, Blue Origin programmed the capsule to make a clean separation to a distance of several hundred feet before the escape rocket motor fired up.

Cornell said the test was an “important step in our march toward flying humans in space.”