Blue Origin joined SpaceX in the club of companies to reuse a rocket booster after a New Glenn launched from Cape Canaveral on Sunday morning, but the mission payload deployment went awry.
Blue Origin used a previously flown rocket booster for a satellite launch and landed it again, but the satellite went into the wrong orbit.
The launching appeared to go off without a hitch, but a problem prevented the rocket's upper stage from putting its payload into the correct orbit.
Blue Origin's heavy-lift rocket failed to deliver a satellite to the proper orbit, prompting an investigation into the anomaly.
Morning Overview on MSN
Blue Origin’s third New Glenn launch lands the booster but puts the satellite in the wrong orbit — FAA grounds rocket
Blue Origin nailed the landing and botched the delivery. On April 19, 2026, the company’s New Glenn rocket lifted off from ...
Update: Blue Origin is now planning a preflight test known as a hot fire Thursday, April 16. The Federal Aviation Administration's plan advisory now suggests a launch window for New Glenn could open ...
Launch recap: Scroll down to review live updates from the Sunday, April 19, liftoff of a Blue Origin New Glenn heavy-lift rocket from Cape Canaveral — and the unsuccessful deployment of AST ...
23don MSN
Blue Origin’s New Glenn put a customer satellite in the wrong orbit during its third launch
The first major failure of Blue Origin's new heavy-launch system could create delays to its ambition to help NASA and the Trump administration return to the Moon.
Blue Origin's New Glenn is about to launch for its 3rd time from Florida. But in the years ahead, the rocket could get off ...
Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin looks to be on the cusp of launching its towering New Glenn rocket on its third-ever spaceflight. Here's what we know.
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results