Blue Origin’s $28 million ticket to space


A bald man in sunglasses and a flight suit, standing in front of a rocket like the one to be ridden by the ticket to space holder.
Jeff Bezos – founder of Amazon in 1994 and Blue Origin in 2000 – is planning to be aboard the sub-orbital flight launching July 20, along with the lucky holder of an auctioned ticket to space. Image via Blue Origin.

Sold! For $28 million

How would you spend $28 million (USD), if you had it on hand? Perhaps you’d become the highest bidder for an 11-minute ride to space. That happened this weekend, on Saturday, June 12, 2021, when a yet-unnamed individual offered the highest bid for a ticket to space and a seat on the New Shepard – Blue Origin’s suborbital launch rocket – alongside the private spaceflight company’s founder, Jeff Bezos. Blue Origin’s online live auction for the ticket to space followed a two-week long competition for the seat. The winner will join Bezos and his brother Mark, plus another yet-to-be-named passenger, in a trip beyond Earth’s atmosphere scheduled for launch on July 20.

The bidding, which lasted less than seven minutes, was live-streamed on Blue Origin’s website on June 12. In total, the seat cost the bidder $29,680,000, which includes a 6% buyer’s premium.

Ariane Cornell, director of astronauts and orbital sales at Blue Origin, exclaimed after the auction:

How exciting was that!? $28 million! The whole Blue Origin team cannot wait to meet our first customer.

Month-long bid for a ticket to space

Blue Origin initially opened the auction to private bidders beginning May 5. Blue Origin reported that nearly 7,600 people from 159 nations registered for the auction. For any planned bids above $50,000, bidders had to deposit $10,000. The first day of the public online event, May 19, ended at $2.8 million. When Bezos announced on June 7 that he and his brother would come along on the space flight, the bid rose to $4.8 million. And during Saturday’s live auction, the number jumped to $28 million.

The winning bid amount will be donated to Club for the Future, which is Blue Origin’s own nonprofit organization for Science Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) education. The nonprofit has been operating for more than two years and is open to educators, parents, and young students, designed to integrate educational lessons with Blue Origin missions.

So, who will fly?

The identities of the auction winner and the anonymous passenger will be announced at a later date, Blue Origin has said. What’s known at this time is that eligible flyers must be at least 18 years old. They also must stand between five feet to six feet and four inches (152 – 285 cm) tall, and weigh between 110 – 223 pounds (50 – 101 kg). Furthermore, they will need to be able to climb New Shepard’s launch tower – consisting of seven flights of stairs – in under 90 seconds.

The winner also must be able to sustain up to three times the force of gravity for up to two minutes and be able to reliably follow instructions by radio contact or visual cues.

After they’ve signed a liability waiver, performed some basic training, and met these physical standards, Blue Origin will assess their ability to fly.

The bidder stands to make history by being one of the first space tourists to fly above the 62-mile-high (100 km) Kármán line, the boundary separating Earth’s atmosphere from outer space. To that note, launch is scheduled to coincide with the also-historic 52nd anniversary of Apollo 11, which put humans on the moon on July 20, 1969.

The flight will last a total of 10 – 12 minutes, starting with a lift and ascent planned to launch 2 minutes and 45 seconds. The crew capsule will separate from the rocket’s propulsion module at about 220,000 feet (67,000 m), then continue to ascend to over 328,000 feet (100,000 m). After some time in Earth’s orbit, the capsule will begin its return back to Earth with parachutes designed to slow its descent. It will land near where the New Shepard launched at Blue Origin’s Launch Site One in Texas.

The July 20 flight will mark the rocket’s 16th flight; the 15 to come before it have been un-crewed test flights. It will also be the third use of the capsule, called the RSS (Reusable Space Ship) “First Step.” The price for future seats aboard New Shepard hasn’t been shared. But according to Space.com, the top bidders who did not win the auction will be among the first to have access to future seats.

A white rocket with the words Blue Origin written on its side lifts vertically into a blue sky with bright orange flames below.
Blue Origin’s New Shepard launch vehicle lifts from the company’s Texas launch site on a suborbital test flight. The holder of the newly auctioned ticket to space will ride a rocket like this one. Image via Blue Origin.

Read more: A brief segment on the history and future of space tourism

Bottom line: On June 12, 2021, Blue Origin concluded a live auction for a ticket to space. The unnamed winner will join Jeff Bezos and his brother, plus another yet-to-be-named passenger, in a New Shepard rocket beyond Earth’s atmosphere scheduled for launch on July 20.

Via Blue Origin

Via Space.com

The post Blue Origin’s $28 million ticket to space first appeared on EarthSky.



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A bald man in sunglasses and a flight suit, standing in front of a rocket like the one to be ridden by the ticket to space holder.
Jeff Bezos – founder of Amazon in 1994 and Blue Origin in 2000 – is planning to be aboard the sub-orbital flight launching July 20, along with the lucky holder of an auctioned ticket to space. Image via Blue Origin.

Sold! For $28 million

How would you spend $28 million (USD), if you had it on hand? Perhaps you’d become the highest bidder for an 11-minute ride to space. That happened this weekend, on Saturday, June 12, 2021, when a yet-unnamed individual offered the highest bid for a ticket to space and a seat on the New Shepard – Blue Origin’s suborbital launch rocket – alongside the private spaceflight company’s founder, Jeff Bezos. Blue Origin’s online live auction for the ticket to space followed a two-week long competition for the seat. The winner will join Bezos and his brother Mark, plus another yet-to-be-named passenger, in a trip beyond Earth’s atmosphere scheduled for launch on July 20.

The bidding, which lasted less than seven minutes, was live-streamed on Blue Origin’s website on June 12. In total, the seat cost the bidder $29,680,000, which includes a 6% buyer’s premium.

Ariane Cornell, director of astronauts and orbital sales at Blue Origin, exclaimed after the auction:

How exciting was that!? $28 million! The whole Blue Origin team cannot wait to meet our first customer.

Month-long bid for a ticket to space

Blue Origin initially opened the auction to private bidders beginning May 5. Blue Origin reported that nearly 7,600 people from 159 nations registered for the auction. For any planned bids above $50,000, bidders had to deposit $10,000. The first day of the public online event, May 19, ended at $2.8 million. When Bezos announced on June 7 that he and his brother would come along on the space flight, the bid rose to $4.8 million. And during Saturday’s live auction, the number jumped to $28 million.

The winning bid amount will be donated to Club for the Future, which is Blue Origin’s own nonprofit organization for Science Technology, Engineering and Math (STEM) education. The nonprofit has been operating for more than two years and is open to educators, parents, and young students, designed to integrate educational lessons with Blue Origin missions.

So, who will fly?

The identities of the auction winner and the anonymous passenger will be announced at a later date, Blue Origin has said. What’s known at this time is that eligible flyers must be at least 18 years old. They also must stand between five feet to six feet and four inches (152 – 285 cm) tall, and weigh between 110 – 223 pounds (50 – 101 kg). Furthermore, they will need to be able to climb New Shepard’s launch tower – consisting of seven flights of stairs – in under 90 seconds.

The winner also must be able to sustain up to three times the force of gravity for up to two minutes and be able to reliably follow instructions by radio contact or visual cues.

After they’ve signed a liability waiver, performed some basic training, and met these physical standards, Blue Origin will assess their ability to fly.

The bidder stands to make history by being one of the first space tourists to fly above the 62-mile-high (100 km) Kármán line, the boundary separating Earth’s atmosphere from outer space. To that note, launch is scheduled to coincide with the also-historic 52nd anniversary of Apollo 11, which put humans on the moon on July 20, 1969.

The flight will last a total of 10 – 12 minutes, starting with a lift and ascent planned to launch 2 minutes and 45 seconds. The crew capsule will separate from the rocket’s propulsion module at about 220,000 feet (67,000 m), then continue to ascend to over 328,000 feet (100,000 m). After some time in Earth’s orbit, the capsule will begin its return back to Earth with parachutes designed to slow its descent. It will land near where the New Shepard launched at Blue Origin’s Launch Site One in Texas.

The July 20 flight will mark the rocket’s 16th flight; the 15 to come before it have been un-crewed test flights. It will also be the third use of the capsule, called the RSS (Reusable Space Ship) “First Step.” The price for future seats aboard New Shepard hasn’t been shared. But according to Space.com, the top bidders who did not win the auction will be among the first to have access to future seats.

A white rocket with the words Blue Origin written on its side lifts vertically into a blue sky with bright orange flames below.
Blue Origin’s New Shepard launch vehicle lifts from the company’s Texas launch site on a suborbital test flight. The holder of the newly auctioned ticket to space will ride a rocket like this one. Image via Blue Origin.

Read more: A brief segment on the history and future of space tourism

Bottom line: On June 12, 2021, Blue Origin concluded a live auction for a ticket to space. The unnamed winner will join Jeff Bezos and his brother, plus another yet-to-be-named passenger, in a New Shepard rocket beyond Earth’s atmosphere scheduled for launch on July 20.

Via Blue Origin

Via Space.com

The post Blue Origin’s $28 million ticket to space first appeared on EarthSky.



from EarthSky https://ift.tt/2TBt5qQ

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