蓝色起源第二次成功着陆新格林火箭助推器。
Blue Origin lands New Glenn rocket booster on second try

原始链接: https://techcrunch.com/2025/11/13/blue-origin-lands-new-glenn-rocket-booster-on-second-try/

蓝色起源在第二次发射尝试中,成功在北大西洋的无人机船上着陆了新格伦火箭的助推器,这一壮举此前仅由SpaceX实现。这一里程碑对于使新格伦成为一种可重复使用且具有成本效益的大型有效载荷发射选项至关重要。 这次发射不仅仅是关于着陆;新格伦还部署了两个NASA航天器,它们将前往火星研究该行星的大气层。此次成功部署,加上助推器的着陆,标志着这个大型火箭系统的重大成就。 在经历延误和1月份首次发射着陆失败后,蓝色起源进行了必要的修复并展示了更高的可靠性。此次成功使蓝色起源有可能在发射市场上与SpaceX竞争,并支持其长期目标,包括为NASA加速的月球探测计划做出贡献。进一步的测试,包括助推器翻新和重新发射,现在正在计划中。

## 蓝色起源第二次尝试成功着陆新格林助推器 - 摘要 蓝色起源在第二次发射尝试中成功着陆了其新格林火箭助推器,这标志着该公司的一个重要里程碑。此次发射还携带了一艘正在前往火星的NASA飞船。虽然成功,但讨论的中心在于新格林与SpaceX的猎鹰重型和星舰的比较。 评论员指出,新格林提供了更大的低地球轨道有效载荷能力,可能与猎鹰重型竞争,但并未带来全新的能力。一些人争论SpaceX的迭代开发方法是否比蓝色起源更传统的方法更有效率。 对话还涉及更广泛的太空竞赛、竞争的重要性以及对ULA等公司的潜在影响。 讨论还包括星舰的雄心勃勃的目标以及政府资金和私人投资在太空探索中的作用。 最后,一些评论员强调了蓝色起源最近的文化转变以及新领导层的影响。
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原文

Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin has landed the booster of its New Glenn mega-rocket on a drone ship in the Atlantic Ocean on just its second attempt — making it the second company to perform such a feat, following Elon Musk’s SpaceX.

It’s an accomplishment that will help the new rocket system become an option to send larger payloads to space, the Moon, and beyond.

Thursday’s launch wasn’t just about the landing attempt, though. Roughly 34 minutes after takeoff, the upper stage of New Glenn successfully deployed the rocket’s first commercial payload: twin spacecraft for NASA that will travel to Mars to study the red planet’s atmosphere.

The pair of achievements are remarkable for the second-ever launch of such a massive rocket system. And it could put Blue Origin in position to compete with SpaceX, which dominates the world’s launch market with its Falcon 9, Falcon Heavy, and Starship rockets.

New Glenn’s first launch was in January, and Blue Origin experienced a number of delays in getting the second rocket to launch. The company had hoped to make a second attempt as early as the spring, but pushed it back multiple times. New Glenn finally made it to the launch pad on Sunday, but weather and solar storms delayed it further.

The rocket finally took off from Launch Complex 36 in Cape Canaveral, Florida on Thursday at around 3:55 p.m. ET. At about four minutes into the flight, the second stage separated and headed further into space, while the New Glenn booster began its journey back towards Earth. Roughly 10 minutes into the flight, the 189-foot-tall booster touched down on the platform.

Blue Origin had attempted to bring the New Glenn booster back on the rocket’s first flight in January. But the booster exploded before it had a chance to land on the drone ship. Blue Origin worked with the Federal Aviation Administration to identify and make a number of fixes to the rocket, and the company was confident it could stick the landing on attempt number two.

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The ability to land a booster like this is an important step in making the rocket system reusable, which lowers the cost for customers — a capability that SpaceX has mastered. Blue Origin will now have to demonstrate the ability to refurbish the rocket booster and launch it again.

These are crucial capabilities for commercial customers and government missions. Blue Origin has had its eyes on the Moon for years, and is currently developing a lunar lander. So is SpaceX, with Starship. But the government has asked them to speed up these programs, and acting NASA administrator Sean Duffy recently criticized SpaceX for moving too slowly.

Blue Origin CEO Dave Limp recently said in response his company “will move heaven and Earth” to help NASA get back to the Moon faster. But it can’t do that without successfully proving out all of New Glenn’s capabilities.

Thursday’s launch went a long way toward accomplishing that overarching goal.

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