New Glenn Rocket launch challenges Elon Musk’s space dominance

Report by climate and science
The Spatial Society of the founder of Amazon, Jeff Bezos, exploded its first rocket in orbit in order to challenge the domination of Elon Musk spacex.
The new Glenn rocket was launched from the Cape Canaveral Space Station in Florida at 02:02 Local time (07:02 GMT).
He firmly opposed the two richest men in the world against each other in a commercial space race, arguing to steal larger and more powerful rockets.
The two want to populate the sky with more satellites, lead private space stations and ensure the transport of regular travel by people on the moon.
“Congratulations for having reached Orbit for the first attempt!” Musk wrote in an article in Bezos on X.
Dave Limp, CEO of the Bezos Space Society, Blue Origin, said that he was “incredibly proud”.
“We will learn a lot from today and will try again at our next launch this spring,” he added.
The Bezos team has overcome technical obstacles that caused delays earlier this week when the ice formation interrupted a launch.
The employees and the crowds of Blue Origin gathered near Cape Canaveral Applaudi while the 98 -meter -high rocket moved to orbit.
But the company failed to win the main rocket engine from New Glenn, or Booster, on a platform in the Atlantic Ocean.
He hoped that the booster would be reusable for future launches, but after about 20 minutes of flight, the company confirmed that it had lost the engine.
Bezos’ company, Blue Origin, had trouble matching the pace established by SpaceX. But this launch will be considered a major step for the company.
The new Glenn rocket was named after John Glenn, the first American astronaut at Orbit Earth over 60 years ago.
The rocket is more powerful than the most commonly used rocket in SpaceX, the Falcon 9. It can also transport more satellites, and Bezos wants to use it as part of its Kuiper project, which aims to deploy thousands of satellites on a low land to provide wide -band services.
This project would compete directly with Musk’s Starlink service.

Jeff Bezos founded Blue Origin 25 years ago, saying that he wanted “millions of people working and living in space”.
For years, the company has sent a smaller and reusable rocket called New Shepard to the edge of the earth’s atmosphere. He transported passengers and useful charges, including Bezos himself in 2021.
But Blue Origin was considerably outperformed by SpaceX, which launched its Rockets 134 times last year.
And the new generation of SpaceX rocket, called starship, is even more powerful. The company hopes to launch it in its seventh test flight later in the day.

Some experts say that a new successful Glenn rocket will create real competition between the two companies and could reduce the costs of space operations.
“What you will see is that these two companies challenge themselves to make even more progress,” suggests Dr. Simeon Barber at the Open University in the United Kingdom.
Governments have historically spent billions to build rockets and send missions to space.
But the United States Space Agency NASA is growing more and more to rely only on public funds and have issued huge contracts to private companies to provide rockets and other space services.
Elon Musk SpaceX has already received billions of dollars in space contracts.
His close relationship with the next American president, Donald Trump, could further strengthen his business.