Blue Origin NS-24 | |
Mission Type: | Uncrewed sub-orbital spaceflight |
Mission Duration: | 10 minutes, 13 seconds |
Spacecraft: | RSS H. G. Wells |
Manufacturer: | Blue Origin |
Launch Date: | 19 December 2023, 16:42:28 UTC |
Launch Rocket: | New Shepard (NS4) |
Launch Site: | Corn Ranch, LS-1 |
Launch Contractor: | Blue Origin |
Landing Date: | 19 December 2023 16:52:41 UTC |
Landing Site: | Corn Ranch |
Programme: | New Shepard flights |
Previous Mission: | Blue Origin NS-23 |
Next Mission: | Blue Origin NS-25 |
Blue Origin NS-24 was an uncrewed sub-orbital spaceflight mission of Blue Origin's New Shepard rocket, which launched on 19 December 2023. It was New Shepard's first flight in over a year since the failure of Blue Origin NS-23, and was Blue Origin's 24th overall flight to go into space.[1]
The vehicle lifted off at 16:42:28 UTC on December 19, 2023, from LS-1 at Blue Origin's Corn Ranch launch site in Texas, United States. There were no issues during the flight, like there were on Blue Origin NS-23. Main Engine Cutoff (MECO) occurred at T+02:25. The capsule reached apogee at T+04:07, reaching an altitude of 351,247 feet (107,060 meters), while the booster reached an apogee of 350,855 feet (106,940 meters).[1] [2] [3] The booster touched down successfully at T+07:27 on the North Landing Pad.[3] At 10:52:41 am CST (16:52:41 UTC), the crew capsule landed at the Corn Ranch site, 10 minutes and 13 seconds after liftoff.[1] The booster supporting this mission was New Shepard Booster 4 (NS4), and this was its 9th total flight with a 502-day turnaround time, while the capsule on top was the RSS H. G. Wells.[4]
There were 33 payloads on this mission from NASA, academia, research institutions and commercial companies. This flight brought the total number of payloads flown on the New Shepard vehicle to 150. There were also 38,000 postcards from students across the world, provided by the Club for the Future organization, a Blue Origin nonprofit, as part of its "Postcards to Space" program. According to Blue Origin, more than half the payloads on NS-24 were developed and flown with support from NASA.[1] [5] [6] One of the payloads flown was a prototype of the EagleCam CubeSat that flew on the IM-1 mission to the Moon.[7] [8] [9]