
Copernical Team
EQT in Exclusive Talks to Acquire Majority Stake in Eutelsat's Satellite Ground Station Business

US, Australia collaborate to enhance GPS resilience in contested environments

A 'FURST' of its Kind: Sounding Rocket Mission to Study Sun as a Star

NASA Invites Proposals for Utilizing VIPER Moon Rover

NASA near-Earth defense telescope retired after more than a decade

Prepare for the Perseids and a pretty planetary pairing

New Coordination System Allows Satellite Internet and Radio Astronomy to Share the Sky

ClearSpace and Plextek Strengthen Alliance for Enhanced In-Orbit Services

Chinese satellite launch rocket breaks into hundred of pieces in orbit

Blue Origin tests out New Glenn rocket recovery crane at Port Canaveral

With the first launch of Blue Origin's massive New Glenn rocket still in the works before the end of the year, Jeff Bezos' company got to work testing out its recovery operations with the huge crane parked at Port Canaveral on August 8.
"Port Canaveral spectators got a sneak peek of our recovery operations today as we demonstrated the process of transitioning New Glenn's first stage from vertical to horizontal using our 200-foot-tall simulator," the company posted on X. "The operation validated our tooling and procedures for recovering our first stage from the landing vessel, bringing us another step closer to our first launch."
The 375-foot-tall crane arrived to the port from Germany last October and will be used when New Glenn's booster returns to the port on its "sea-based landing platform," similar to how SpaceX lands its Falcon 9 boosters on droneships.
Since it's a taller rocket, Blue Origin needed a taller crane, and it's the highest point in Port Canaveral, sitting adjacent to SpaceX recovery operations, which use mobile cranes owned and operated by the port nearby.