Waterloo Region Record

Bezos blasts into space on own rocket

‘Best day ever!’ says 57-year-old billionair­e

- MARCIA DUNN AND SEAN MURPHY

Jeff Bezos blasted into space Tuesday on his rocket company’s first flight with people on board, becoming the second billionair­e in just over a week to ride his own spacecraft.

The Amazon founder was accompanie­d by a hand-picked group: his brother, an 18-yearold from the Netherland­s and an 82-year-old aviation pioneer from Texas — the youngest and oldest to ever fly in space.

“Best day ever!” Bezos, 57, said when the capsule touched down on the desert floor in remote west Texas after the 10minute flight.

Named after America’s first astronaut, Blue Origin’s New Shepard rocket soared on the 52nd anniversar­y of the Apollo 11 moon landing, a date chosen by Bezos for its historical significan­ce.

He held fast to it, even as Virgin Galactic’s Richard Branson pushed up his own flight from New Mexico in the race for space tourist dollars and beat him to space by nine days.

Unlike Branson’s piloted rocket plane, Bezos’s capsule was completely automated and required no official staff on board for the up-and-down flight.

Blue Origin reached an altitude of about 106 kilometres, more than 16 kilometres higher than Branson’s July 11 ride. The 18-metre booster accelerate­d to Mach 3 or three times the speed of sound to get the capsule high enough, before separating and landing upright.

The passengers had several minutes of weightless­ness to float around the spacious white capsule with huge windows. Cheering, whooping and exclamatio­ns of “wow” could be heard from the capsule through an audio feed. The capsule landed under parachutes, with Bezos and his guests briefly experienci­ng nearly six times the force of gravity, or 6 G’s, on the way back. Their flight lasted 10 minutes and 10 seconds — five minutes shy of Alan Shepard’s Freedom 7 flight in 1961.

Sharing Bezos’s dream-cometrue adventure was Wally Funk, from the Dallas area, one of 13 female pilots who went through the same tests as NASA’s allmale astronaut corps in the early 1960s but never made it into space. Joining them on the ultimate joyride was the company’s first paying customer, Oliver Daemen, a last-minute fill-in for the mystery winner of a $28million (U.S.) auction who opted for a later flight.

 ??  ?? Blue Origin’s New Shepard takes off, left, and the capsule later parachutes back to earth with passengers Jeff Bezos, brother Mark Bezos, Oliver Daemen and Wally Funk near Van Horn, Texas, on Tuesday.
Blue Origin’s New Shepard takes off, left, and the capsule later parachutes back to earth with passengers Jeff Bezos, brother Mark Bezos, Oliver Daemen and Wally Funk near Van Horn, Texas, on Tuesday.
 ?? PHOTOS BY TONY GUTIERREZ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
PHOTOS BY TONY GUTIERREZ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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