A private space company announced on Tuesday that it had
landed a rocket upright and gently enough to be used again, a milestone
in commercial aeronautics.
Reusing rockets, rather than discarding them, would be a big step toward making space flight less expensive.
The
achievement produced “the rarest of beasts — a used rocket,” Jeff
Bezos, founder of the company Blue Origin and also Amazon, said in a
statement.
Another private company, SpaceX, has tried to land boosters upright on a barge in the ocean, but so far has failed.
Blue
Origin said the unmanned flight took place on Monday morning at its
site in Van Horn in West Texas. The secretive company did not invite
reporters to attend. Its first test flight happened in April.
Its
New Shepard vehicle consists of a capsule that is designed to take
people into space for suborbital flights someday, and a booster. In
Monday’s flight, the booster soared about 100 kilometres high and
released the capsule, which parachuted to the ground.
Standing up at touchdown
After
the separation, the booster began falling back to Earth. It slowed its
descent by firing its engine, starting at about 4,900 feet above ground.
It was descending at just 4.4 mph when it touched down at the launch
site, still standing up, the company said.
“It’s
really a major step forward toward reusability,” John M. Logsdon,
professor emeritus at the George Washington University’s Space Policy
Institute, said in an interview. Although NASA space shuttles were also
reusable after returning to Earth safely, they were far more expensive. —
AP
Source :- The Hindu, 26-Nov-2015
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