Los Angeles Times

Bezos launches himself and tourism into space

Billionair­e’s rocket carries first paying customer

- By Samantha Masunaga and Andrew Mendez

VAN HORN, Texas — The New Shepard rocket rumbled to life early Tuesday, catapultin­g Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos and three others to the edge of space and allowing the world’s richest person to achieve a childhood dream.

Back on Earth, spacefligh­t enthusiast­s saw the brief voyage as the realizatio­n of decades of promise — the beginning of a new era for space tourism.

“Space tourism is finally here,” said Alan Ladwig, author of the book “See You in Orbit? Our Dream of Spacefligh­t.” “It’s still going to be expensive, it’s still not going to be something everybody can do right away, but it’s a first step.”

Bezos’ suborbital flight — his company Blue Origin’s first crewed launch — came a little over a week after British billionair­e Richard Branson along with five others boarded a space plane built by his Virgin Galactic firm and flew to the edge of space and back, making it there ahead of Bezos, who had announced his plans earlier. Virgin Galactic plans to complete two more test flights before it begins flying paying customers to space

next year.

Although Blue Origin flew its first paying customer on Tuesday’s flight — 18-year-old Oliver Daemen, the son of a Dutch private equity executive and now the youngest person to go to space — it has yet to announce seat prices or additional details about its commercial operations. During a livestream of Tuesday’s launch, Ariane Cornell, Blue Origin’s director of astronaut sales, repeatedly encouraged interested customers to email the company.

Already the company is approachin­g $100 million in private sales, Bezos told an assembled audience of guests, employees and reporters after the launch.

An auction for a seat on Tuesday’s flight ended with a winning bid of $28 million, but the ticket holder, whose identity has not been disclosed, postponed the trip, citing scheduling conflicts, according to Blue Origin. They will fly on a future mission. (Proceeds from the auction for a spot on Tuesday’s launch went to the Club for the Future foundation, which was founded by Blue Origin and is aimed at promoting science, technology, engineerin­g and math careers. From those proceeds, 19 nonprofit organizati­ons were selected to receive $1-million grants.)

But suborbital flights aren’t the company’s only goal; Blue Origin plans to build a family of larger rockets that could hoist cargo, satellites and people to orbit and beyond, eventually creating an ecosystem to allow millions of people to live and work in space. Bezos has previously suggested building cylindrica­l habitats with artificial gravity known as O’Neill colonies, after the physicist Gerard K. O’Neill, who pioneered the idea.

“Big things start small,” Bezos said Tuesday. “We’re going to build a road to space so that our kids and their kids can build the future.”

The seeming arrival of the era of suborbital space tourism after years of hype has fueled public debate around the increasing commercial­ization of space and the role that billionair­es play in the industry.

After his flight, Bezos thanked Amazon employees and customers, saying, “You guys paid for all this.” He has previously said he has sold about $1 billion of Amazon stock a year to fund Blue Origin.

The high current price tag for spacefligh­t — Virgin Galactic charges as much as $250,000 per ticket — ref lects the pattern of technologi­cal advancemen­ts in other fields, such as cellphones and air travel, said Timiebi Aganaba, an assistant professor at Arizona State University’s School for the Future of Innovation in Society.

“If we look back at history

... it’s always started off with the people with the most resources that take the first risk,” she said. “We should celebrate the innovation­s that have happened and continue the conversati­ons about how we can bring society along so that it’s not just a joyride for the rich.”

The market for commercial suborbital spacefligh­t could include not just wealthy individual­s but also research entities, government­s and even NASA, said Laura Forczyk, owner of space consulting firm Astralytic­al. NASA is already a major customer for Elon Musk’s SpaceX, which ferries supplies and astronauts to the Internatio­nal Space Station.

“What we’re seeing now is the emergence,” she said. “We do not know yet how quickly this industry is going to mature.”

Alan Stern, a planetary scientist and associate vice president of the Southwest Research Institute’s space science and engineerin­g division, plans to launch aboard Virgin Galactic’s space plane as soon as next year to conduct experiment­s in suborbital space. His flight will be paid for by NASA and the Southwest Research Institute.

Unlike other fields of research in which scientists studying environmen­ts such as a volcano or the ocean can perform their experiment­s in person, space researcher­s have had to automate their experiment­s so that they can be carried out remotely. That costs money and time and sometimes results in failures, said Stern, who has also spoken with Blue Origin about his interest in conducting experiment­s aboard New Shepard. Stern previously served as a consultant for Blue Origin and Virgin Galactic.

Regular and relatively inexpensiv­e suborbital spacefligh­ts would mean he could complete research projects and advance the field more rapidly.

He described Tuesday’s

launch as a “watershed moment,” not because Bezos flew to suborbital space but because it indicated that there would be two commercial suborbital spacefligh­t companies ready for business. The competitio­n could “start returning results for research for education and, frankly, just flying a greater cross section of people.”

Blue Origin’s New Shepard rocket and capsule system launched shortly after 6 a.m. Pacific time from the company’s launchpad about 30 minutes north of Van Horn, Texas. The company had already completed a series of uncrewed flight tests.

Before the launch, about 100 reporters were gathered at the press site. Inns and hotels in the small town of Van Horn were sold out.

“My expectatio­ns were

high, and they were dramatical­ly exceeded,” Bezos said after his return.

He said the most profound part of the trip was seeing Earth’s atmosphere and how delicate it is — an epiphany experience­d by many astronauts and known as the overview effect.

“As we move about the planet, we damage it,” Bezos said. “It’s one thing to recognize that intellectu­ally; it’s another thing to see it with your own eyes how fragile it is.”

The New Shepard rocket booster separated from the crew capsule about two minutes after liftoff and returned to Earth minutes ahead of the capsule. Its return created a sonic boom that could be heard across the Guadalupe Mountains.

The capsule held Bezos, his brother Mark, customer Daemen and aviation pioneer Wally Funk. Audio from the launch livestream captured the capsule’s occupants cheering and reminding one another to look out the windows. They experience­d about four minutes of weightless­ness and were able to move about the capsule before strapping back into their seats for the return to the west Texas desert.

The craft landed back on Earth about 10 minutes after liftoff, buoyed by a trio of parachutes.

Bezos gave a thumbs up from his seat in the capsule after landing. The crew emerged minutes later and was greeted by loved ones as well as a camera crew. To celebrate, they popped bottles of Champagne.

Back at the press site, about two miles from the launch tower, Blue Origin employees cried and cheered as the capsule’s parachutes deployed and when they saw Funk — at age 82, the oldest person to go to space — emerge from the capsule, arms outstretch­ed in triumph.

Funk was part of a privately funded program called the First Lady Astronaut Trainees, also known as the Mercury 13, a group of U.S. female pilots who underwent the same physiologi­cal and psychologi­cal screening tests as NASA’s original Project Mercury astronauts but never went to space.

“I’ve been waiting a long time,” she said after the launch. “I want to go again.”

 ?? Tony Gutierrez Associated Press ?? BLUE ORIGIN’S New Shepard rocket launches from a spaceport north of Van Horn, Texas. It carried Jeff Bezos and three other passengers.
Tony Gutierrez Associated Press BLUE ORIGIN’S New Shepard rocket launches from a spaceport north of Van Horn, Texas. It carried Jeff Bezos and three other passengers.
 ?? Photograph­s by Tony Gutierrez Associated Press ?? PASSENGERS OLIVER DAEMEN, left, Jeff Bezos, Wally Funk and Mark Bezos pose in front of their rocket after the trip. “Big things start small,” Blue Origin founder Jeff Bezos said. “We’re going to build a road to space so that our kids and their kids can build the future.”
Photograph­s by Tony Gutierrez Associated Press PASSENGERS OLIVER DAEMEN, left, Jeff Bezos, Wally Funk and Mark Bezos pose in front of their rocket after the trip. “Big things start small,” Blue Origin founder Jeff Bezos said. “We’re going to build a road to space so that our kids and their kids can build the future.”
 ??  ?? A CAPSULE carrying the four returns to Earth. It landed about 10 minutes after liftoff. Blue Origin is already approachin­g $100 million in private sales, Bezos said.
A CAPSULE carrying the four returns to Earth. It landed about 10 minutes after liftoff. Blue Origin is already approachin­g $100 million in private sales, Bezos said.

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