Watch Blue Origin hotfire its next-gen BE-4 rocket engine | Tech Reader

Date:

Share:



Blue Origin has shared footage of a successful hotfire test of its next-generation BE-4 rocket engine.

The video shows the rocket pumping out up to 550,000 pounds of thrust, with Blue Origin engineers also shown applauding the effort.

“A louder rumble in Rocket City!” the spaceflight company owned by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos said in a social media post on Thursday. “We just completed our first BE-4 engine hotfire test at the historic Test Stand 4670 in Huntsville. We also continue to test BE-4 engines at our Texas facility. The BE-4 engine produces 550,000 pounds of thrust and is our most powerful engine yet.”

A louder rumble in Rocket City! We just completed our first BE-4 engine hotfire test at the historic Test Stand 4670 in Huntsville. We also continue to test BE-4 engines at our Texas facility. The BE-4 engine produces 550,000 pounds of thrust and is our most powerful engine yet. pic.twitter.com/iyLb3p67PE

— Blue Origin (@blueorigin) February 2, 2024

The ground-based test is a welcome achievement for Blue Origin and comes just weeks after the engine made its first successful flight, powering United Launch Alliance’s new Vulcan Centaur rocket on its own maiden flight in the Peregrine Mission 1 for Astrobotic Technology.

The recent hotfire event offers more confirmation of the BE-4’s reliability following a setback last June when a similar BE-4 test at Blue Origin’s facility in West Texas ended suddenly in an explosion.

The BE-4 engine is key to Blue Origin’s spaceflight ambitions. Besides building it for the likes of ULA, the booster will also power Blue Origin’s own reusable New Glenn rocket, which is currently in development.

ULA’s Vulcan Centaur vehicle uses two BE-4 engines in the first stage, while the New Glenn rocket will fly with seven of the engines.

Notably, the Vulcan Centaur and New Glenn rockets are to be used for 38 Vulcan launches and as many as 27 New Glenn launches in missions to deploy Amazon’s Project Kuiper internet satellites in the coming years in an initiative similar to SpaceX’s Starlink service.

Blue Origin has also been selected by NASA to use the New Glenn to fly its own Blue Moon lander to the moon in an Artemis mission that could take place before the end of this decade.

Up until recently most Blue Origin flights have involved its single-stage, suborbital New Shepard rocket. The New Glenn and BE-4 engine take its space ambitions to a whole new level.

Editors’ Recommendations








Source link

━ more like this

Nintendo just revealed Pauline as a surprise character in Donkey Kong Bananza

Nintendo just dropped a ton of details about the next major Switch 2 first-party game. Donkey Kong Bananza was the star of a...

Google’s AI-powered Search Live feature is here to further cannibalize the internet

Google's Search Live feature with voice input is now available on its app for iOS and Android in the US. You'll have to...

This AI Model Never Stops Learning

Modern large language models (LLMs) might write beautiful sonnets and elegant code, but they lack even a rudimentary ability to learn from experience.Researchers...

Economists believe interest rates will be held at 4.25% – London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com

Economists believe the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) will hold interest rates at 4.25% on Thursday. Rising food inflation and the threat...
spot_img