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Post Info TOPIC: Blue Origin, LLC


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RE: Blue Origin, LLC
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"Blue Origin wants you! Actually, Blue Origin needs you and wants to hire you … assuming you’re a hard working, technically gifted, team-oriented, experienced aerospace engineer or engineering leader. If you might be interested in joining us, please keep reading."

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The billionaire founder of amazon.com has released the first images of the launch of a private spacecraft that could bring space travel to the masses.
A video of the cone-shaped Goddard vehicle shows it climbing to about 85m (285ft) before returning back to Earth.
The test launch took place in November 2006 in a remote part of Texas, but details have only now been released.

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Test Program Flight Lasts Two Minutes
It didn't last long... but that wasn't the point. Early Monday morning, the west Texas spaceport being built by Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos witnessed its first rocket launch, a brief test flight presumbly connected to Bezos' Blue Origin commercial space venture.

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The West Texas spaceport being built and financed by Jeff Bezos, founder of Amazon.com, has launched a test rocket at 6:30 a.m. on Monday.

"There was a launch, a one- or two-minute event" - Roland Herwig, Federal Aviation Administration spokesman.

The exact nature of the launch or the type of spacecraft was not immediately known.
The company obtained a temporary overflight restriction from the FAA over the period from Friday to Monday. The restriction barred other aircraft from a 5-mile radius of the spaceport and up to 10,000 feet in altitude for a five-hour period each day.

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The Seattle-based Blue Origin rocket company, bankrolled by Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos, plans to set up corporate headquarters and primary operations in the city of Kent, Washington, US, next year.

Secretive in their rocket work, Blue Origin is rumoured to be engaged in developing a passenger-carrying vertical takeoff and landing rocket.
According to a recent statement from Kent’s mayor, Jim White, Blue Origin will house the rocket firm’s operations for research, design, manufacturing, assembly and testing in the city of 84,000 people, creating a capacity for up to 100 jobs. Kent is 29 kilometres south of Seattle and less than 8 kilometres from Seattle-Tacoma International Airport.
Blue Origin executives anticipate that the company’s launch facility in West Texas, combined with its new Kent headquarters, will support the rocket group’s long-term mission, “to enable an enduring human presence in space.”

"We were won over by Kent’s attractive business climate. It is centrally located with easy access to major transportation corridors" - Rob Meyerson, Blue Origin program manager, said in a press statement issued by the City of Kent.

Kent’s proximity to Sea-Tac airport and its location as a mass transit hub was a factor in Blue Origin’s decision to establish its new headquarters in the city.
Earlier this year, details regarding Blue Origin’s rocket work were highlighted in public meetings held in Texas. The rocket company is building launch facilities in Culberson County, Texas, put in place to test a series of launch vehicles. The first vehicles in the series are being designed to take off and land vertically, carrying three or more astronauts to the edge of space.

The launch site on privately owned property, taking up about 800 acres of the 167,000-acre Corn Ranch.
During the West Texas town meetings, Meyerson said Blue Origin anticipated beginning flight tests of its vehicle in the latter half of 2006 — a time frame that depends on readiness of the vehicle and launch site.
Incremental construction of the launch site and facilities was to begin in early 2006, taking about a year to complete.
Flight testing would span three to five years, leading to regular commercial flights. During the testing phase, he said that he anticipated launching less than 25 times a year.
According to a briefly posted document on the Blue Origin Web site, the group’s reusable launch vehicle would haul paying passengers on suborbital jaunts. The group’s spaceship would comprise a propulsion module and a crew capsule. Hydrogen peroxide and kerosene are to be used as propellants.
The booster would be fully reusable, flying autonomously under control of onboard computers. There would be no ground control during nominal flight conditions.

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Blue Origin, the secretive commercial spaceflight startup funded by Amazon.com billionaire Jeff Bezos, has released new details about their plans to offer suborbital passenger spaceflights.
A brief summary posted on the company's web site several days ago described the company's plan to launch manned spacecraft from property the company owns in Culberson County in western Texas.

Blue Origin's unnamed suborbital RLV will launch and land vertically from the site, using engines powered by kerosene and hydrogen peroxide.
Blue Origin plans to begin test flights beginning as early as the third quarter of next year, with commercial flights carrying three or more people to follow.

The summary originally stated that such flights would take place up to 52 times a year, but the flight rate has since been deleted from the summary.
The release was timed with public hearing the company is holding this week in Van Horn, Texas, part of the process needed for the company to obtain a launch license from the FAA.

http://www.blueorigin.com/web_description.htm

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