Home Uncategorized New Glenn Launches NASA’s ESCAPADE, Lands Fully Reusable Booster

New Glenn Launches NASA’s ESCAPADE, Lands Fully Reusable Booster

by Editorial Staff

On November 13, 2025, Blue Origin’s New Glenn heavy-lift rocket successfully launched for the second time, marking a pivotal milestone for the commercial launch vehicle. The mission, lifting off from Cape Canaveral, achieved full mission success by deploying NASA’s twin ESCAPADE spacecraft into a loiter orbit. These spacecraft will journey to Mars in 2026 to study atmospheric escape and the planet’s interaction with the solar wind. A cornerstone of the mission was the flawless landing of the massive, fully reusable first stage on the Atlantic Ocean recovery vessel, Jacklyn—a historic feat for a booster of its size on only a second flight.

Beyond its primary payload, the launch also served as a critical National Security Space Launch (NSSL) certification flight. An onboard demonstration for Viasat’s HaloNet and NASA’s Communications Services Project successfully tested a new telemetry data relay service. Leadership from Blue Origin, including CEO Dave Limp, hailed the achievement as the beginning of a new era, emphasizing the company’s focus on scaling flight cadence to work through its extensive manifest.

The success underpins New Glenn’s role in future ambitious projects, including establishing a sustained human presence on the Moon through the Artemis program, supporting Amazon’s Project Kuiper, and enabling multi-orbit mobility with the Blue Ring platform. With several vehicles in production and a full order book, New Glenn is positioned as a foundational asset for both commercial and national security objectives, advancing the industry toward a routine launch, land, and repeat cycle.

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